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Fairness, equity, and justice in the Paris Agreement: Terms and operationalization of differentiation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2021

Ulrike Will
Affiliation:
Leipzig University of Applied Sciences (HTWK), PO Box 30 11 66, 04251 Leipzig, Germany Email: ulrike.will@gmx.de
Cornelia Manger-Nestler
Affiliation:
Leipzig University of Applied Sciences (HTWK), PO Box 30 11 66, 04251 Leipzig, Germany Email: ulrike.will@gmx.de
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Abstract

The Paris Agreement (2015) and the Rulebook (2018) introduce the terms ‘fair’ and ‘climate justice’ for burden-sharing and differentiation. The article analyses to what extent these terms amend the existing term ‘equity’ and the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities (CBDR).

The principle of CBDR is an open balancing concept with one clear requirement: Contracting parties contribute to climate protection to a different extent. The terms which appear to have normative weight (‘equity’ and ‘climate justice’), in international climate agreements, are limited to their procedural relevance. They aim at an equal participation in sub-institutions of the Paris Agreement or at making arguments for differentiation transparent. The term ‘fair’ focuses on the discourse on individual concepts of differentiation and on narrowing down common criteria in the long-run.

Considering the operationalization of differentiation beyond the terms, it becomes clear that criteria are hardly specified, not weighted against each other and that self-differentiation dominates pre-defined criteria, in particular within the central rules on mitigation and financial transfers. However, the Paris Agreement still specifies criteria with different relevance: Capabilities are followed by vulnerability and the responsibility for emissions.

After all, the prevailing procedural terms and rules of differentiation might give orientation, inspire subsequent decisions and the nationally determined contributions (NDCs). The more transparent the various specifications of differentiation are, the more the rules of differentiation can be narrowed. If the reference of criteria to individual states is possible, the Paris Agreement might be implemented effectively which allows for better compliance with the Agreement.

Type
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

1. Introduction

States agree on the common responsibility to face climate change problems while they recognize that the contribution of developed countries must be higher than that of developing countries.Footnote 1 However, there is no consensus on how strong differentiation should be or on which criteria it should be based.Footnote 2 The distribution of the costs for climate protection (burden-sharing) and procedural rules of differentiation affect participation in climate agreements, the implementation, and compliance with these agreements.Footnote 3

All international climate agreements contain terms and rules of differentiation. The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)Footnote 4 and the Kyoto ProtocolFootnote 5 formulate the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities (CBDR)Footnote 6 and ‘equity’ as guiding principles. The Paris AgreementFootnote 7 and the Paris RulebookFootnote 8 refer to these requirements even more frequently adding ‘fairness’ and ‘climate justice’ as new terms.

Many publications mention the principle of CBDR, ‘equity’, ‘justice’, and ‘fairness’ in one breath without explaining the differences.Footnote 9 Several authors discuss differentiation concentrating on operationalization.Footnote 10 Others make their own suggestions on how terms of differentiation should be interpreted.Footnote 11 The differences between the terms of differentiation have only attained little attention in the context of international climate law.Footnote 12

The use of various terms means that each term has a discrete meaning which leads to the following research questions: What do the various terms of differentiation mean? How can they be distinguished from each other and what is the use (effet utile) of each term? How are they operationalized?Footnote 13 To what extent their clarification provides new arguments for the controversy around burden-sharing or procedural rules of differentiation?

A better understanding of the terms and their operationalization might have an impact on later climate agreements and decisions of the Conferences of Parties to the UNFCCC (COPs) and the Paris Agreement (CMA)Footnote 14 as well as on the nationally determined contributions (NDCs). This article should make it possible to use the terms in a more thoughtful and targeted way, in climate politics but also in research.

Article 2(1)(a) Paris Agreement requires holding the increase in the global average temperature below 2 °C above pre-industrial levels referring to all contracting parties as a group. This aim is binding but not sufficiently precise to evaluate the compliance of individual contracting parties.Footnote 15 To tell to what extent each party complies with the Agreement, the rules of differentiation need to be clarified. The more clearly these rules are defined, the less they can be manipulated to excuse insufficient contributions to climate protection. Additionally, the international climate policies being perceived as appropriately differentiated can increase the willingness to contribute.Footnote 16

Terms like ‘climate justice’ invite to a broader discussion on what is the objective measure for burden-sharing and differentiation. However, this article does not analyse how climate agreements should be.Footnote 17 It remains within the scope of existing agreements using the methods of legal interpretation defined in the Vienna Convention of the Law of the Treaties (VCLT). Even if the terms of differentiation always maintain a certain normative weight,Footnote 18 their discussion shall be as unbiased and close to the treaty as possible. Where the agreement refers to vague terms or allows for discretion, different interpretations might remain relevant.Footnote 19 The specification of criteria for differentiation depends on the climate agreements whether or not ethical reasons speak for their consideration.

The Paris Agreement refers to ‘the Convention’.Footnote 20 Decision 1/CP.21 mentions the Kyoto Protocol.Footnote 21 To explain the historical development and context of the terms of differentiation, these earlier agreements are included in the analysis. COP and CMA decisions are also comprised,Footnote 22 especially if these are formulated in mandatory terms.Footnote 23

After clarifying the various terms of differentiation of the climate agreements (Section 2), we discuss their broader context and the operationalization of criteria of differentiation (Section 3). The result summarizes what is the legal measure for burden-sharing and differentiation in international climate agreements (Section 4). The outlook provides future perspectives (Section 5).

2. Terms

The principle of CBDR and the terms ‘equity’, ‘fairness’, and ‘climate justice’ seem to overlap, all aiming at differentiation.Footnote 24 The question is to what extent these terms differ from one another. This section analyses these terms according to the rules of Articles 30–33 VCLT.Footnote 25

The frequency and the combination of terms of differentiation in international climate agreements and subsequent decisions (Table 1)Footnote 26 reveal to what extent a term is institutionalized whereas its legal weight depends on the bindingness, content, and context of the respective provision.

Table 1. Terms of differentiation in international climate agreements and subsequent decisions

Source: own design.

The term ‘equity’ appears most frequently, followed by the principle of CBDR. The term ‘climate justice’ is used once in the preamble of the Paris Agreement.Footnote 27 The term ‘fair’ is used once in the preamble of Decision 1/CP.21 and five times in the Paris Rulebook. The principle of CBDR is used in the same context as ‘equity’ and ‘fair’. The Paris Rulebook uses the terms ‘equity’ and ‘fair’ together.

Differentiation depends on the comparison of one party’s contribution with those of other parties based on pre-defined characteristics. The more these characteristics differ, the more parties might be treated differently and vice versa. Which criteria are relevant, potential thresholds, and how all relevant criteria are interrelated, is controversial.Footnote 28

Criteria for differentiation of climate agreements can be summarized under the following headings: equality, capabilities, vulnerability, responsibility,Footnote 29 and open criteria.

  • Equality can be an argument for differentiation if it depends on a neutral criterion, for example on equal chances for developmentFootnote 30 or equal emission rights per capita;Footnote 31

  • Capabilities Footnote 32 include the state of development correlated with the financial, institutional, and technological capacity to face climate change problems;

  • Vulnerability includes the susceptibility to climate changeFootnote 33 today and in the future. The more vulnerable a state is, the more it benefits from climate activities;Footnote 34

  • The responsibility for emissionsFootnote 35 can include the share of global absolute and per capita emissions in the past, today, and in the future.Footnote 36 Responsibility indirectly refers to the availability of resources affecting climate change, e.g., fossil fuels or sinks;Footnote 37

  • Open criteria for differentiation, e.g. ‘national circumstances’Footnote 38 and ‘priorities’Footnote 39 can be defined by the contracting parties.

To bring all these criteria into consistency by an all-in-one indicator is difficult. Equal emissions per capita,Footnote 40 for example, can reflect the first four criteria as far as they correlate with high absolute, cumulative and historical emissions, with a high state of development and capacity to face climate change problems and with low vulnerability to climate change. However, the example of China and India shows that immense absolute emissions can correlate with moderate per capita emissions and cumulative emissions.Footnote 41 Moreover, relative indicators are uncritical about limited resources (here a stable climate) and the limits of growth,Footnote 42 i.e., if the emissions per capita were the only criterion of differentiation, a limitation of absolute emissions would remain important.

Even if criteria of the five categories above can be specified, it is not clear which of them apply, what weight they have,Footnote 43 how they are measured, how often they need to be updated,Footnote 44 and how to deal with uncertainties or lack of data. How these criteria refer to the terms of differentiation of international climate agreements is also unclear. A deeper analysis of climate agreements and subsequent decisions might elucidate the relevance of the criteria for the terms and in the context of operationalization.

2.1 The principle of CBDR

References to the principle of CBDR can be found in the UNFCCC,Footnote 45 the Kyoto Protocol,Footnote 46 the Paris AgreementFootnote 47 and its subsequent decisions.Footnote 48 The term ‘common’ formulates a collective responsibility of all contracting parties for climate protection.Footnote 49 The term ‘differentiated’ signifies that the states’ contributions to climate protection are not the same.Footnote 50

The term ‘responsibilities’ can refer to current, historical, and future responsibilities for emissions.Footnote 51 Apart from the general term ‘responsibility’ included in the principle of CBDR, the 3rd preambular recital of the UNFCCC mentions historical and current emissions explicitly.

Current emissions can be measured by local monitoring stations but also by satellite data, which allows for overall monitoring of emissions worldwide.Footnote 52 As regards current emissions, it appears possible to isolate terrestrial and seasonal factors to measure emissions and also to assign these factors to specific states.Footnote 53 Emissions can be assigned to the producer of goods or services (current approach)Footnote 54 or (also) to the consumer.Footnote 55

Historical responsibility becomes relevant if it not only confirms other criteria for differentiation (e.g., current emissions) but if it changes the legal obligations of a contracting party. A predominance of historical emissions is neither formulated nor excluded by international climate agreements. Data on historical emissions are not always available and might not have the same quality and reliability as of current emissions,Footnote 56 as monitoring has been and still is improving. The concentration of CO2-equivalents in the atmosphere reflects historical emissions only to the extent they remain in the atmosphere for a longer period whereas the origin of those emissions is uncertain. That climate effects can be delayedFootnote 57 also means that emissions that are no longer measurable in the atmosphere can have caused climate effects.Footnote 58 In any case, emissions caused long ago are more difficult to measure and to assign to individual states than current emissions. This is further complicated if the borders of states change. Furthermore, it is unclear whether all greenhouse gas emissions or only the most relevant shall be included in the calculation. It is also unclear whether a certain extent of emissions per capita must be excluded from this calculation to cover basic needs. In that case, it might be difficult to define these minimum needs, even more if accounting for changes of the population which would require further historical data to monitor the net emissions of a state.

To overcome these uncertainties, a reference period could be defined. The industrial revolution, the global awareness about climate change problems,Footnote 59 the beginning of negotiations, the conclusion, or ratification of the first multilateral climate agreement, or a certain standard for monitoring emissions could mark the starting point. For example, the conclusion of the UNFCCC in 1992 would be a reasonable starting point.Footnote 60 However, this reference period would ignore a major part of historical emissions making them almost congruent with current emissions, which reduces the added value of historical emissions as a separate criterion.

The inclusion of developing countries into the Paris Agreement reveals that potential emissions also matter. However, the question is again whether future emissions have an added value affecting the rules of differentiation. The strong correlation with current emissions and capabilities to face climate change problems as well as the uncertainties to monitor potential emissions might reduce their relevance as a separate criterion.Footnote 61

Considering the aim and purpose of the principle of CBDR, responsibility could also be understood in the sense of taking responsibility implying various criteria of differentiation, not only the responsibility for emissions. The different qualifiers of the principle of CBDR support this perspective.

Article 3(1) UNFCCC deals with general principles of the UNFCCC aiming at the protection of the climate system for present and future generations.Footnote 62 As a qualifier, Article 3(1) adds the term ‘and respective capabilities’. The 6th preambular recital of the UNFCCC adds the respective ‘social and economic conditions’. Both capabilities and conditions can be pre-defined by a neutral criterion. ‘Social and economic conditions’ are not limited to climate-based criteria but could also include non-climate related criteria. Article 4(1) UNFCCC and Article 10(1) Kyoto Protocol use the qualifier ‘and their specific national and regional development priorities, objectives and circumstances’, which is even more open to individual criteria.

The Paris Agreement and the Rulebook always add the qualifier ‘and respective capabilities, in the light of different national circumstances’Footnote 63 The term ‘respective capabilities and circumstances’ also appears frequently without the principle of CBDR.Footnote 64 As for Article 3(1) UNFCCC, capabilities and circumstances can be defined by neutral criteria. The Paris Agreement neither refers the CBDR to ‘priorities’ nor to national or regional objectives as Article 4(1) UNFCCC and Article 10(1) Kyoto Protocol do.

The Paris Rulebook specifies the term ‘circumstances’ in the context of NDCs: geography, climate, economy, sustainable development, and poverty reduction.Footnote 65 This list is neither mandatory (‘as appropriate’) nor conclusive (‘inter alia’) but open. The criteria might be changed or complemented. To explain how a party has progressed, the following ‘circumstances’ are specified: the government structure, population profile, and sector details.Footnote 66 These criteria are rather descriptive and partly not climate-based. It is unclear whether this list applies beyond the context of NDCs, how they affect the rules of differentiation, how relevant each criterion is in comparison to others, and how often they need to be updated. Therefore, the contracting parties define whether they apply them or not and also their respective weight.

Finally, the principle of CBDR remains an open principleFootnote 67 seeking to include various criteria for differentiation but not quantifying them or going into detail as regards their specific weight. Without a clear measure for differentiation, the legal force of the principle remains limited.Footnote 68 What can be said is that differentiation depends on verifiable criteria and that climate-based criteria and capability play an important role. However, with the terms ‘circumstances’ and ‘priorities’ added as qualifiers, the principle of CBDR has become more open to individual and even to non-climate related criteria.

2.2 Equity

The terms ‘equity’ and ‘equitable’ appear in the UNFCCC,Footnote 69 the Paris Agreement,Footnote 70 and its subsequent decisions.Footnote 71 The term ‘equity’ stems from the Latin term aequitas originally meaning ‘equality’Footnote 72 and is based on Western legal traditions. It is connected with the idea of universality owing to its Latin originFootnote 73 but is also an open term that depends on political, ethical, and cultural values.Footnote 74 In the English language, equity is a ‘quality of being fair and impartial’Footnote 75 or ‘free and reasonable conformity to accepted standards of natural right, law, and justice without prejudice, favoritism, or fraud and without rigor entailing undue hardship’.Footnote 76 Hence, equity requires a comparison between two entities by specific criteria based on which equal treatment is necessary.Footnote 77 Such criteria could, for example, be the original positions, rights, opportunities, or outcomes.Footnote 78

Both the UNFCCC and the Paris Agreement use the terms ‘equity’ and ‘equitable’ in the context of general aims of the agreement, mitigation targets, financial contributions, to formulate different obligations for developed and developing countries, or within the group of developing countries.Footnote 79 Article 4(1) Paris Agreement requires that states aim to reach the maximum of greenhouse gas emissions worldwide as soon as possible, recognizing that developing countries will take longer before peaking. Equity refers to equal access to development and the eradication of poverty.Footnote 80 The term ‘equity’ is also used for appropriate geographical representation for different mechanisms of the Paris Agreement.Footnote 81 Moreover, rules on transparency include equity as a qualifying requirement.Footnote 82

The UNFCCC requires to protect the climate for present, and future generations and included them under its central principles.Footnote 83 These provisions either use the term ‘should’ or are indeterminate and, therefore, unbinding. In contrast, the Paris Agreement includes ‘intergenerational equity’ in the preamble.Footnote 84 ‘Intergenerational equity’ seeks to maintain resources for future generations.Footnote 85 In contrast to other provisions of the same recital, intergenerational equity was not referred to as a right. An explanation for not using the term ‘rights’ for future generations might be the difficulty to specify the right holder and the claimant for future generations.Footnote 86 Besides, the reach for such rights and the comparison with the rights of current generationsFootnote 87 would be controversial.Footnote 88 How could the freedoms of different generations be compared in a world of causal uncertainties, technological, and irreversible environmental effects? How can we find a measure for intergenerational equity if we do not even agree on measures for equity in the current global society?Footnote 89 These questions get more complicated if the population or state borders changeFootnote 90 or if we included the ecocentric dimension considering the preservation of nature as an own value.Footnote 91

Edith Brown Weiss’s approach to ‘intergenerational equity’Footnote 92 seeks to avoid the difficulties to represent future generations and make their rights comparable to present generations. She considers intergenerational equity to require the conservation of options (the diversity of the natural and cultural resource base), quality (maintaining the conditions of the planet between the generations), and access (maintaining the legacy of previous generations). These requirements cover the procedural and distributional dimension of equity.Footnote 93 Referring intergenerational equity to climate change, Brown Weiss includes these principles for both mitigation and adaptation.Footnote 94

The Paris Agreement directly mentions the requirement for biodiversity (options) and includes the preservation of a certain quality of a stable climate (quality), for example by formulating the 2 °C target.Footnote 95 Both requirements are also implied by the frequent mention of the term ‘sustainable development’.Footnote 96 However, the Paris Agreement does not formulate the rights of future generations (access). Brown Weiss’s criteria are only partly applicable. Furthermore, the central principles of Article 2 Paris Agreement refer only to equity without the intergenerational dimension.Footnote 97

The negotiating history confirms the focus of equity on development and procedural aspects: Article 3(1) UNFCCC specified equity referring to the responsibility for climate change and the state of development.Footnote 98 Negotiators considered equity to require the developed countries to lead,Footnote 99 which was reflected in the annex structure of the UNFCCC and the Kyoto Protocol but which is also formulated in the Paris Agreement.Footnote 100

The Paris Agreement refers to resolutions of the UN General Assembly (UNGA) that also include the term ‘equity’:Footnote 101 the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)Footnote 102 and the Addis Ababa Action Agenda.Footnote 103 As their relevance for climate agreements is limited,Footnote 104 they support existing interpretations rather than opening new dimensions of equity.

The SDGs use ‘equity’ or ‘equitable’ 13 times: synonymously for equality,Footnote 105 with the term ‘non-discriminatory’,Footnote 106 with the term ‘fair’,Footnote 107 and ‘just’Footnote 108 but without specifying differences between these terms. ‘Equity’ is used in the context of access to education, human and gender rights, equality of chances to development, an appropriate sharing of benefits of genetic resources, and equal access to water.Footnote 109 The Addis Ababa Action Agenda uses ‘equity’ eight times: in the context of equality of chances, non-discrimination, economic growth and sustainable development, and adequate geographical representation.Footnote 110 Both resolutions refer to future generations.Footnote 111 The two UNGA resolutions define ‘equity’ by procedures and equal rights. Only equal access to resources implies distributional aspects.Footnote 112

Finally, the term ‘equity’, as used in international climate agreements, subsequent decisions, and further applicable rules of international law, is defined by procedural and substantive rules aiming at equality of neutral criteria: participation, geographical representation, development prospects, and a proportionate share in the atmosphere. Several of these criteria might become relevant but their weight is not pre-defined.

2.3 ‘Climate justice’

The term ‘climate justice’ was included for the first time in the 13th preambular recital of the Paris Agreement.Footnote 113 The term ‘justice’ (Latin justitia) is defined as ‘impartial adjustment of conflicting claims’, ‘conformity to truth, fact, or reason’,Footnote 114 ‘quality of being fair and reasonable’,Footnote 115 and ‘morally right and fair’.Footnote 116 Compared to ‘equity’, the term ‘justice’ is more universal (whether or not a consensus on its meaning is found).Footnote 117 Justice can refer to moral foundations of conduct, political institutions, distribution, or minimum standards for individual rights.Footnote 118

The 13th preambular recital of the Paris Agreement prescribes ‘noting the importance for some of the concept of “climate justice”’.Footnote 119 Using the term ‘concept’ in singular could mean that there is only one concept of ‘climate justice’. Though the vague specification of actors makes it a relative term. ‘Some’ could either refer to persons or contracting parties including public or private actors. ‘Climate justice’ is no principle under Article 2 Paris Agreement but mentioned in the preamble and in a non-binding manner.Footnote 120 It is put in quotation marks which further weakens the normative loading the term originally has. Still, the term must be defined.

John Rawls considers justice as the ideal of an institution or rule.Footnote 121 In contrast, Amartya Sen considers justice as an improvement of an unjust situation referring to institutions and actions.Footnote 122 We will concentrate on these two theorists. Rawls’ theory has gained a lot of attention across various disciplines,Footnote 123 also in the climate context,Footnote 124 whereas Sen complements and criticizes it, offering an approach that suits the Paris Agreement. Both theories distinguish the substantive (distributional) and the procedural level of differentiation, which is decisive to understand the relationship between ‘climate justice’, ‘equity’, and ‘fairness’.

Rawls considers justice to become relevant because the collaboration of persons generates social advantages.Footnote 125 He constructs an original position where people of one community are equally represented and negotiate on their ideal institutions without knowing their role and welfare in life (‘veil of ignorance’).Footnote 126 Bargaining advantages and customs are blended out to find consensus on allocation rules.Footnote 127 Rawls assumes that an inclusive society (which is smaller than the global society) can achieve consensus on ideal institutions and allocation rules by balancing.Footnote 128 He considers the society to agree on a precise rule for allocation under uncertainty: The least advantaged members of society must have the greatest benefit (‘maximin rule’).Footnote 129 Depending on the circumstances, he considers this rule to be apt to be put into practice.Footnote 130

However, this theory does not directly apply to international relations,Footnote 131 for which Rawls formulated a more cautious approach.Footnote 132 For international justice, he suggests rules that are close to existing international law: the equality of states, respect of peoples’ independence, the exclusion of the right to war or intervention, the right of self-defence, the guarantee of basic human rights, the pacta sunt servanda rule, and minimum support in case of a famine or drought.Footnote 133 Distributional aspects are explicitly left aside by this catalogue.Footnote 134 Only where peoples suffer from ‘unfavourable conditions’ making it impossible to fulfil the requirements for the own society, shall other societies offer support,Footnote 135 but even in a crisis, mutual assistance depends on the feasibility for the supporter.Footnote 136 Beyond that, co-operation is voluntary.Footnote 137 Rawls limits distributional rules because not all societies are deemed liberal,Footnote 138 the global society is not considered a community with common values and sources of authority and, therefore, not expected to agree on and comply with a common distributional rule.Footnote 139

Rawls’s requirements for international relations could apply to the climate context. Ecologic limits challenge the minimum conditions for international peace and basic human rights (at least, in the long-run). The duty of assistance in a crisis might become relevant with climate change. However, the latter would not imply re-distribution or support of mitigation but rather support for adaptation.

Some authors seek to extend the ‘Theory of Justice’ beyond Rawls’s original intention including distributional justice for international relations.Footnote 140 Compared to Rawls’ time, global interactions have become more intense, for example through trade, capital, and labour flows,Footnote 141 communication, and culture.Footnote 142 This generates global social advantages (e.g., comparative advantages) but also external effects (e.g., climate change). Neither stops at national borders and can cause global redistribution effects.Footnote 143 Digital media make it easier to exchange common global values and more difficult to hide information. These interdependencies speak for extending distributional justice to international relations and could require pursuing distributional justice even if non-liberal societies are part of international co-operation. At least, liberal societies could improve on justice, combining it with conditional co-operation. In this way, Rawls’s ‘Theory of Justice’ could apply to international ‘climate justice’.

Amartya Sen uses a comparative approach to justice (non-ideal theory), which is based on the social choice theory.Footnote 144 It aims at the reduction of injustice in situations where the best solution for a problem is not identified or available, which he considers to be mostly the case.Footnote 145 This approach allows for incomplete solutions making justice more feasible.Footnote 146 Sen uses Adam Smith’s concept of an impartial spectator:Footnote 147 Arguments must prevail against an open and inclusive global public reasoning.Footnote 148 All arguments on the ideal solution, information on existing social problems, and living conditions, must be considered while being as independent as possible from one’s own characteristics and positions.Footnote 149

Sen seeks to improve the capabilities (chances) of a society,Footnote 150 not necessarily the achievements (results).Footnote 151 Means to capabilities are, inter alia, income,Footnote 152 healthcare, the nature of education, social organization, and social cohesion.Footnote 153 Sen argues that people with strong capabilities to reduce injustice should use them,Footnote 154 whereas vulnerable people need more support than others.Footnote 155 Still, improvements in capabilities are not pursued at all costs.Footnote 156

The comparison of possible alternative choices cannot be measured by only one criterion such as utility or happiness (non-commensurability).Footnote 157 In contrast to Rawls, Sen accepts a plurality of impartial reasons that might be compared with each other, e.g., efforts, talents, or needs.Footnote 158 To reduce injustice, ‘a broad range of not fully congruent weights’ (selective rankings) can be sufficient.Footnote 159

What do these theories tell us about ‘climate justice’? With Rawls’s theory (applied to the global case), all relevant actors fairly represented in negotiations can achieve a consensus on ‘climate justice’ as interactions of the global society are possible today. However, consensus on one balanced principle of justice remains hard to find, in the original position as in practice.Footnote 160 Rawls’s approach does not formulate ‘climate justice’ as open and cautious as the Paris Agreement does.

Sen’s approach to justice is closer to the Paris Agreement.Footnote 161 His approach upholds a plurality of impartial reasons and lowers injustice step-by-step. Even a little progress in preventing injustice contributes to ‘climate justice’ if side-effects do not outweigh it. For example, financial transfers to vulnerable or developing countries for climate purposes can improve on ‘climate justice’ even if missing core aims of the Paris Agreement. Sen’s focus on capabilities corresponds to the growing relevance of this term in international climate agreements.Footnote 162

The negotiating history confirms the procedural approach to ‘climate justice’. In the climate negotiations before Paris, the initiative ‘The People’s Demands for Climate Justice’ was launched which might have influenced the consideration of the term ‘climate justice’ for the draft of the Paris Agreement.Footnote 163 The draft used the term in the context of the distribution of the climate budget and for the idea of a climate justice tribunal.Footnote 164 Criteria of differentiation were historical responsibilities, the ecological footprint, capabilities, the state of development, and the population.Footnote 165

The SDGs use ‘just’ and ‘justice’ seven times,Footnote 166 the Addis Ababa Action Agenda once.Footnote 167 The terms are formulated as general aims for global societies, to emphasize the equality of chances, sustainable development, and the rule of law.Footnote 168 They are also used together with ‘fair’Footnote 169 and ‘equity’,Footnote 170 confirming overlaps between these terms but not clarifying their differences. The SDGs recognize the reduction of injustice as one form of justiceFootnote 171 which suits the approach suggested by Sen.

Finally, the term ‘climate justice’ of the Paris Agreement aims at inclusion of arguments but does not specify criteria for burden-sharing, or differentiation, or their weight. The approach of Sen aiming at a successive reduction of injustice and the inclusion of all actors into the discussion about justice fits the term ‘climate justice’, but even this procedural approach remains unbinding.

2.4 Fairness

The terms ‘fairness’ or ‘fair’ are also new in the context of international climate agreements. After being used in the Lima Call for Climate Action (CP.20),Footnote 172 the term ‘fair’ was included in subsequent decisions to the Paris Agreement.Footnote 173

The term ‘fair’ comes from the Old High German word fagar originally meaning ‘pleasing’ or ‘attractive’. In Middle English, the term had a meaning similar to equitable.Footnote 174 Fairness is defined as ‘acceptable and appropriate in a particular situation’,Footnote 175 ‘just and appropriate in the circumstances’,Footnote 176 and ‘conforming to an established commonly accepted code of rules of a game or competitive activity’.Footnote 177 The term is characterized by ‘honesty and justice’ and applies ‘to judgments … or acts resulting from judgments and signif[ies] freedom from improper influence’.Footnote 178 It aims at ‘treating people equally without favouritism or discrimination’Footnote 179 and finding the ‘right balance of claims or considerations that is free from undue favouritism’.Footnote 180 Compared to the terms ‘equity’ and ‘justice’, ‘fairness’ is more relative to empirical perceptions and focused on procedures.Footnote 181

This also suits the interpretations of Rawls and Sen. Rawls considers fairness as a procedural rule dependent on the consensus of an inclusive society regarding institutions and rules that enable them to communicate and interact to achieve benefits from co-operation.Footnote 182 Sen defines fairness as a synonym for impartiality, the condition to choose between alternatives the least unjust one.Footnote 183 Konow distinguishes impartiality from self-interest, self-serving biases, or spite but also from altruism, reciprocity, kinship, and friendship.Footnote 184 We consider fairness as an open term of differentiation based on impartiality within a group of people at a given time.

One study discussing the term ‘fair’ in the context of international environmental law is the study by Thomas Franck.Footnote 185 In contrast to Rawls and Sen, Franck considers ‘fairness’ to comprise both procedural and distributional rules.Footnote 186 Franck also includes under ‘fairness’ what we discussed under ‘justice’. He analyses the quality of specific sources of international environmental law. His procedural approach of all-inclusiveness of actors corresponds to the approaches of Rawls and Sen. Franck’s relativistic elements are also culture and history/time.Footnote 187 As for Rawls and Sen, common perceptions of reference groups (communities) lead to a similar legal and moral perception.Footnote 188

As we do not seek to evaluate the law by normative criteria but only want to clarify the wording of the positive law that employs normative terms, we will not follow Franck’s methodology. Using different terms for distributional and procedural differentiation (as Rawls and Sen suggest) facilitates the understanding of the different levels of the terms of differentiation of the Paris Agreement.

Inclusively specifying fairness is complicated because less developed countries, vulnerable groups, and states that have fewer resources to formulate their expectations have less capacity whereas future generations are not represented at all.Footnote 189 Making the fairness perceptions of all contracting parties transparent might be the first step to an inclusive global fairness approach.

In Paragraph 27 of Decision 1/CP.21 and in the 9th preambular recital of Decision 4/CMA.1, the contracting parties agree:

that the information to be provided by Parties communicating their nationally determined contributions … may include, as appropriate … how the Party considers that its nationally determined contribution is fair and ambitious, in the light of its national circumstances, and how it contributes towards achieving the objective of the Convention as set out in its Article 2[.]Footnote 190

The terms ‘may’ and ‘as appropriate’ make the inclusion of fairness criteria voluntary.

In contrast, Paragraph 6 Annex I to Decision 4/CMA.1 defines binding criteria for the NDCsFootnote 191 to improve on clarity, transparency, and understanding including information about:

How the Party considers that its nationally determined contribution is fair and ambitious in the light of its national circumstances:

  1. (a) How the Party considers that its nationally determined contribution is fair and ambitious in the light of its national circumstances;

  2. (b) Fairness considerations, including reflecting on equity;

  3. (c) How the Party has addressed Article 4, paragraph 3, of the Paris Agreement;

  4. (d) How the Party has addressed Article 4, paragraph 4, of the Paris Agreement;

  5. (e) How the Party has addressed Article 4, paragraph 6, of the Paris Agreement.Footnote 192

These requirements are mandatory; in contrast to other procedural rules formulated in Annex I, Paragraph 6 does not use the term ‘as appropriate’.

In both quotations, the term ‘fair’ is combined with the term ‘ambitious’, which aims at a reflection on how each NDC contributes to the overall climate protection target (1.5–2 °C). Ambition seems to be no criterion of differentiation. However, as states are affected by climate change to a different extentFootnote 193 and as self-differentiation is decisive in the Paris Agreement, reflections on ambition imply reflections on differentiation.Footnote 194

The term ‘fair’ is combined with the term ‘national circumstances’, which corresponds to the qualifier of the principle of CBDR. The term ‘national circumstances’ aims at the definition of neutral criteria to justify the own contributions and expectations towards other states. These criteria can but do not have to be climate-based.Footnote 195

The term ‘including’ in Paragraph 6 of Annex I to Decision 4/CMA.1 leads to the conclusion that equity is a form of fairness while not all fairness criteria are also equity criteria. The term ‘fair’ seems to depend more on individual circumstances and acceptance than the term ‘equity’ which is (also) based on pre-defined criteria.

Paragraph 6(c), (d), and (e) of Annex I to Decision 4/CMA.1 also specifies the term ‘fair’ as it is listed under the headline ‘How the Party considers that its nationally determined contribution is fair and ambitious in the light of its national circumstances’. These rules refer to mitigation targets and the requirement to track progress (‘ratchet mechanism’) and emphasize capabilities as a criterion for differentiation.

Paragraph 11 Decision 3/CP.24 uses the term ‘fair’ in the context of workshops, long-term climate finance, and gender-balance. It aims at inclusiveness in international climate events.

In the negotiating history of international climate agreements and in subsequent decisions, the term ‘fair’ is used in the context of trade as a means of technology transfer,Footnote 196 access to a possible future market mechanism,Footnote 197 an adequate representation in the Climate Technology Centre and Network,Footnote 198 and an adequate distribution of financial resources.Footnote 199 This confirms the high relevance of inclusiveness in procedures and institutions.

The Lima Climate Call for Action (2014) used the term ‘fair’ in the context of national mitigation targets and together with the term ‘equitable’.Footnote 200 Australia, Bolivia, Chile, the Dominican Republic, Fiji, Indonesia, Mexico, the Philippines, South Africa, South Korea, and Switzerland agreed to the terms ‘fair’ and ‘equitable’ being mentioned together. Trinidad and Tobago as well as the USA opted against this.Footnote 201 In the end, the term ‘fair’ was not used together with ‘equitable’ but later, in the context of the NDCs, it was.Footnote 202 This speaks for parallel but non-identical meanings of the two terms (effet utile).

UNGA resolutions mentioned in the Paris Agreement also refer to the terms ‘fair’ and ‘fairness’. The SDGs use the term ‘fair’ twice, always combined with the term ‘equitable’.Footnote 203 They use the term ‘fair’ for an appropriate sharing of the benefits of genetic resources. The Addis Ababa Action Agenda uses the term eight times: in the context of the rule of law and equal chances to sustainable development, taxation, the shared responsibility for the prevention of debts, and transparency.Footnote 204 Parallels to the Paris Agreement are the closeness of fairness to equity and the focus on procedural aspects.

Finally, in the context of the decisions to the Paris Agreement, fairness is a procedural rule to establish a representative and open discourse on differentiation to discuss substantive criteria for differentiation. The contracting parties of the Paris Agreement might explain why they consider their NDC as fair, formulate expectations towards other states, or define criteria for fairness. They might include climate- and non-climate-based circumstances in these considerations, possibly comparing them with other states’ circumstances. Individual concepts of fairness become more transparent to facilitate a common understanding one day.

2.5 The terms in other authentic treaty languages

Another perspective is provided by comparing the authentic language versions of the Paris Agreement and subsequent decisions.Footnote 205 Like the English version, the Arabic version uses different terms for ‘climate justice’ (), ‘equity’ (), and ‘fair’ (). The Arabic term for ‘fair’ () used in Decision 1/CP.21 depends on individual approaches to differentiation as it is the case for the English term.Footnote 206

In contrast, the Chinese version uses a separate term for justice () but a common term for ‘equity’ and ‘fair’ (). The French version also does not differentiate between the terms ‘fair’ and ‘equity’ but uses the terms équité and équitable for both terms.

The Spanish version uses justicia and justa for both ‘justice’ and ‘fair’ and equidad for equity. Equidad is used for both ‘equality’ and ‘equity’ in the Spanish language, which confirms that ‘equity’ refers more to equality than the other terms of differentiation.

In the Russian version, ‘justice’, ‘equity’, and ‘fair’ are translated by the same term: справедливость. This term can be used for individual and general approaches to differentiation. Using only справедливость is not intuitive because the Russian language also has other terms for justice (правосудие) and equity (равноправие).Footnote 207

That the three English terms do not always have an equivalent in the other languages does not mean the respective concept of differentiation behind them is unknown.Footnote 208 For example, the French term équité could be understood in both specifications of the English terms (equity and fairness). The Russian term справедливость can also include both the substantive and the procedural aspect of differentiation.

Legally, ‘[t]he terms of the treaty are presumed to have the same meaning in each authentic text’.Footnote 209 The English version of the treaty has no prevalent role but can be the starting point, as the Paris Agreement and the subsequent decisions were negotiated in English. If reconciliation of the terms in all authentic languages is not possible,Footnote 210 the terms are brought into consistency by the other means of legal interpretation, in particular by looking at the aim and purpose of the agreement.Footnote 211

All but the Russian version distinguish at least two terms of differentiation. The aim of this distinction might be to distinguish the procedural and substantive level of differentiation whereas the agreements focus on procedural rules of differentiation.

2.6 Result: Procedural approach to differentiation

The terms of differentiation have strong parallels and fine differences. Differentiation is mandatory but self- rather than pre-defined. The principle of CBDR is the broadest concept implying unequal efforts of all parties that depend on climate- and non-climate related circumstances.

‘Equity’ is the term most frequently used. Procedural criteria for equity specified so far are the broad participation of all contracting parties and equal geographical representation. Substantive criteria are less specified. Capability is one common criterion, but individual criteria can be added as long as applied in a non-discriminatory way.

Compared to the other terms, ‘climate justice’ has the strongest claim to pre-defined criteria for differentiation. However, as used in the Paris Agreement, it also aims at inclusion of arguments rather than prescribing pre-defined criteria for the one and only concept of differentiation.

The term ‘fair’ depends on the moral convictions of a reference group based on impartial reasoning, whatever these convictions may be. In the climate context, this requires global public reasoning on differentiation.

Finally, all terms of differentiation used in the Paris Agreement and subsequent decisions, aim at a procedural approach to differentiation: Ideas and arguments for differentiation of all parties shall be made transparent to all parties. The communication of the NDCs facilitates the discourse on further and more concrete criteria and arguments of procedural and substantive differentiation.

3. Operationalization

International climate agreements use criteria, categories, parameters, and arguments for differentiation with or without referring explicitly to the terms of differentiation.Footnote 212 As implicit rules of differentiation are the context for all terms of differentiation, they are discussed together. This section analyses capabilities, vulnerability, and responsibility.

3.1 Capabilities: The continued relevance of the categories ‘developed countries’ and ‘developing countries’

The state of development (capability) is used within and outside the principle of CBDR.Footnote 213 A high development correlates with a high share in global emissions and the capability to face climate change problems. Therefore, developed countries are considered to be particularly responsible for climate protection whereas the need of developing countries to progress is recognized.Footnote 214 Accordingly, countries of Annex I of the UNFCCC and Annex B of the Kyoto Protocol had to reduce emissions; non-Annex I and non-Annex B countries did not have to mitigate.Footnote 215

The Paris Agreement requires developed and developing countries to contribute to climate protection. The role of the previous annexes for the Paris Agreement remains controversial.Footnote 216 The Agreement seeks to ‘enhance the implementation of the Convention, including its objective’,Footnote 217 but the bottom-up approach of NDCsFootnote 218 lowers the relevance of the annexes. Still, the Paris Agreement uses the terms ‘developed country’ and ‘developing country’ frequentlyFootnote 219 but without specifying them further.Footnote 220 It also refers to ‘other countries’,Footnote 221 which seems to include all but developed countries. The added value of the term ‘other countries’ (instead of ‘developing countries’) could be to include emerging countries with less (binding) obligations than developed countries.Footnote 222 The obligations of ‘other parties’ are formulated as soft law adding the terms ‘voluntarily’,Footnote 223 ‘should’,Footnote 224 and ‘invite’.Footnote 225

Article 4(4) Paris Agreement recommends that developed countries lead.Footnote 226 They should submit absolute emission reduction targets. Developing countries are encouraged to move towards emission reduction or limitation targets. Article 4(1) of the Agreement requires recognition that peaking will take longer for developing countries than for developed countries. Article 4(15) Paris Agreement requires considering the concerns of developing countries in the implementation process of the Agreement.

In the UNFCCC and the Kyoto Protocol, developing countries received financial and technology transfers without paying for them.Footnote 227 The Paris Agreement also recognizes the need to support developing countries; including financial transfers, technology exchange, and capacity buildingFootnote 228 with developed countries in the leadership role to offer this support.Footnote 229

Reporting is also less strict for developing countries. Article 13(9) and (10) Paris Agreement prescribes transparency for both developed and developing countries. However, the specifications of the Paris Rulebook are less restrictive for developing countries as regards the guiding principles of modalities, procedures, and guidelines.Footnote 230 These lower requirements are also reflected in the obligation for developed countries to assess uncertainties quantitatively whereas developing countries can use qualitative criteria.Footnote 231 The national circumstances can lower the transparency requirements for developing countries.Footnote 232 Consequently, only developing countries are encouraged to formulate their needs as regards the transparency requirements.Footnote 233

Developing countries shall be supported in formulating their NDCs,Footnote 234 research, collecting and identifying adaptation needs, the assessment of vulnerability, and monitoring.Footnote 235 However, in contrast to the requirements on financial transfers, the requirements of general support of Articles 4(5) and 7(13) Paris Agreement use the passive voice, i.e., they do not oblige a specific group of countries to pay.Footnote 236 Hence, this support might come from both developed and developing countries. The extent of support is also open.Footnote 237

As for the qualifiers of the principle of CBDR,Footnote 238 the terms ‘circumstances’,Footnote 239 and ‘priorities’Footnote 240 are employed if developing countries shall have lower obligations than developed countries. The term ‘circumstances’ still requires that conditions can be based on objective criteria. The term ‘priorities’ implies more discretion. Both terms also allow for the inclusion of non-climate related criteria.Footnote 241

The operationalization of differentiation also depends on the discretion of the respective groups of countries. Climate agreements and subsequent decisions maintain discretion for all contracting parties using the terms ‘sovereignty’, ‘nationally determined’, ‘nationally appropriate’, ‘country-driven’, or ‘party-driven’.Footnote 242 Partly, developing countries have more discretion than developed countries.Footnote 243 Finally, ‘developed country’ and ‘developing country’ (capability) remain decisive criteria for differentiation but with an unclear assignment of the parties to these categories.

3.2 Vulnerability

Vulnerability is used to subdivide the category of developing countries but also to address all other contracting partiesFootnote 244 and persons in vulnerable situations.Footnote 245 The vulnerability of a country can affect its mitigation targets, requirements on transparency and capacity, contributions to funding, and the right to receive funding.Footnote 246

The Paris Agreement recommends assessing a party’s vulnerability as appropriate.Footnote 247 There is no pre-defined measure for vulnerability. It distinguishes categories of countries concerning their vulnerabilities: LDCsFootnote 248 (vulnerable because of low development), SIDSFootnote 249 (vulnerable because of the geographical situation), and developing countries that are particularly vulnerable.Footnote 250 These categories are neither specified nor is a threshold defined for changing the category.Footnote 251

The UN Committee for Development Policy uses income, population, and economic vulnerability to define LDCs.Footnote 252 The list currently includes 47 states as LDCs.Footnote 253 A list of 28 SIDS was defined with the SDGsFootnote 254 and by the UN Conference on Trade and Development.Footnote 255 As the Paris Agreement neither refers to these lists nor enables the UNGA to define the terms, these lists are non-binding to the parties of the Paris Agreement.Footnote 256 Parties can define to which category they belong.Footnote 257 Nonetheless, a categorization based on objective parameters might facilitate the recognition of the development status by other states more than self-definition.

Formulating the emissions targets in their NDCs, only LDCs and SIDS may communicate strategies that reflect their ‘special circumstances’.Footnote 258 The term ‘special’ emphasizes their vulnerability and makes their NDCs more open to individual criteria.Footnote 259 LDCs and SIDS shall receive more financial support for both mitigation and adaptation than other developing countries.Footnote 260 As regards obligations on transparency, LDCs and SIDS may provide the information required in Article 13 Paris Agreement at their discretion.Footnote 261 Moreover, LDCs shall be supported in capacity building.Footnote 262 However, without specifying the extent of support or the responsible supporters, the effect of the support provisions is questionable.

3.3 Responsibility

Responsibility matters beyond the principle of CBDR.Footnote 263 In the sense of international climate agreements, responsibility can include current, historical, or future emissions.Footnote 264 Climate agreements contain procedural rules referring to the responsibility for emissions, e.g., obligations on monitoring and accounting. These formulate general obligations for all contracting parties and are not criteria of differentiation.Footnote 265 Those differentiations made in the context of accounting refer to capability, as discussed above, rather than to responsibility.Footnote 266

Flexible mechanisms as formulated in the Kyoto ProtocolFootnote 267 and planned in Article 6 Paris AgreementFootnote 268 indirectly include responsibility as a criterion for differentiation. They imply financial transfers from those who emit more than they agreed to do to others that over-achieve their emissions targets. Prohibiting double-countingFootnote 269 also emphasizes the responsibility for emissions. As the new market mechanism under Article 6 Paris Agreement has not been established so far, this reference to responsibility also remains open.

Responsibility is indirectly included in rules on adaptation.Footnote 270 Although the reasons for adaptation support could be manifold, it implies the dimension of (past) emissions. This logic also applies to the Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and DamageFootnote 271 and the Adaptation Committee.Footnote 272 Still, although adaptation support can imply a certain recognition of responsibility, its relative weight remains unclear as adaptation support is neither binding nor quantified so far.Footnote 273

Another criterion for responsibility is per capita emissions.Footnote 274 However, as the parameter is only mentioned in the preamble of the UNFCCC but not in the Paris Agreement, it is unlikely to dominate capabilities and vulnerability which are frequently mentioned.Footnote 275

Finally, the responsibility for emissions is interrelated with the maintenance of carbon sinks in a party’s own country. The recent controversy on Brazil’s rainforest makes clear that it is not self-evident for developing and emerging countries to give priority to the preservation of the own forests instead of using this territory for other purposes (as many developed countries did).Footnote 276 Maintaining carbon sinks is related to responsibility and might speak for additional financial transfers. The Kyoto Protocol compensated for the maintenance of carbon sinks, even though the relevance of these certificates was limited.Footnote 277 The Paris Agreement only contains a recommendation to conserve forests in Article 5(1) and (2). Whether the new mechanism under Article 6 Paris Agreement will include compensation is uncertain.Footnote 278

3.4 Result: Dominance of capability

The Paris Agreement comprises elements of procedural rather than substantive equality. Of the criteria operationalizing differentiation, capability is the most relevant, followed by vulnerability, responsibility, and open categories of differentiation marked by the terms ‘national circumstances’ or ‘priorities’. However, the weight of these categories or a precise threshold above which a country switches to another category is not yet defined. A reason for this ranking of operationalizing criteria is that capability implies less redistribution and lower costs for developed countries than the other two criteria.Footnote 279

4. Result

Narrowing down the rules of differentiation is considered the key to ambitious climate commitments.Footnote 280 The vagueness of the terms and criteria of burden-sharing and differentiation in the Paris Agreement might be one reason for the emissions gap.Footnote 281

With the Paris Agreement and the Rulebook, the rules of differentiation have become even more open than they were in the UNFCCC and the Kyoto Protocol. This implies both risk and opportunity for the flexible approach of the Paris Agreement. The Paris Agreement and the Rulebook introduce ‘climate justice’ and ‘fairness’ as new terms of differentiation and continue to refer to the principle of CBDR and ‘equity’. However, all four terms broaden rather than narrow the rules of differentiation. Differentiation is mandatory but self- rather than pre-defined. All terms focus on a transparent and open discourse about the criteria of procedural and substantive differentiation that are free of discrimination.

Of the criteria operationalizing differentiation, capabilities (state of development) and vulnerability are most recognized in the Paris Agreement. Yet, their relative weight compared to other criteria is not specified or quantified. The criterion of responsibility is less mentioned. It can be referred to the open principle of CBDR and is implied by the rules on adaptation, loss and damage, and the flexible mechanism. Current (or recent) emissions appear to be decisive for responsibility, but historical and future responsibility cannot be excluded from being relevant. As responsibility has strong correlations with capabilities and negative correlations with vulnerability, the added value of responsibility is uncertain. Hence, if the contracting parties take capabilities and vulnerability into account at all, compliance with the rules operationalizing differentiation seems easy.

The Paris Agreement and the Rulebook also use the open terms ‘circumstances’ and ‘priorities’ more frequently than previous agreements. These open terms and the strong discretion of contracting parties to define their own criteria for differentiation correspond to the bottom-up structure and the co-operative spirit of the Agreement. However, they make the rules of differentiation become even less clear.

Possible specifications of qualitative criteria, categories, arguments, and quantitative parameters of differentiation and their relative weight were offered across the disciplines.Footnote 282 These normative studies provide guidance for the political debate and raise the pressure on individual parties, but they do not have much legal weight. From the perspective of the open rules for differentiation of international climate agreements, it cannot be said which contracting party did not contribute sufficiently.

The Paris Agreement and the Rulebook missed the opportunity to clarify the terms and criteria for differentiation in detail. Apart from procedural requirements, contracting parties define the criteria almost free of legal constraints. This seems to be the price for including many states into the Paris Agreement and makes it hard to consider it as a treaty that goes beyond what states politically are willing to do. It is easy to hide behind open legal terms of differentiation and vague criteria for specification rather than filling them. In case of non-compliance with the Paris Agreement, individual contracting parties cannot be blamed but only all contracting parties as a group.

5. Outlook

The controversy about differentiation goes far beyond international law. Discussions about what is just (philosophy), what maximizes welfare or utility, is efficient, and incentive-based (economics) de facto affect the legal discourse on differentiation.Footnote 283 Where economic studies provide quantifiable measures, these could be included in future agreements or decisions. However, its underlying normative assumptions must be made transparent. Other disciplines should not foreclose valid legal interpretations and should be aware of the discretion the contracting parties maintain.

The contracting parties of the Paris Agreement represent an interpretative community. They could define terms or criteria of differentiation in subsequent agreements, decisions, or in the NDCs. As a timely and detailed specification seems unlikely, contracting parties could alternatively continue to establish further procedural rules on how to narrow these criteria down step-by-step. The requirement to formulate individual approaches to fairness and ambition in the NDCsFootnote 284 is the first step in this direction. Whether this facilitates harmonization of the criteria for differentiation remains to be seen.

Besides, the contracting parties could be obliged to refer to criteria, or to react to statements or arguments about differentiation of other NDCs,Footnote 285 or to justify the refusal of criteria. This would deepen the discourse on criteria and facilitate harmonization in the long-run.

Footnotes

*

An earlier version of this article was presented at an InFairCom workshop at the ZEW Mannheim. We thank all participants for the motivating and constructive discussions. Moreover, we would like to thank Joëlle Chassard, Prof. em. Dr. iur. Ludwig Gramlich, Ass. iur. Markus Gentzsch, Nicole Hoppe, Donia Mahabadi, Kostyantyn Vdovenko, and two anonymous referees for helpful comments on previous drafts of that article. All remaining errors are ours.

This article was written in the context of the InFairCom project in the funding line ‘Economics of Climate Change’ funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (grant no. 01LA1825C).

References

1 In international climate law, a deviation from the sovereign equality of states has become the rule. C. Voigt and F. Ferreira, ‘Differentiation in the Paris Agreement’, (2016) 6 Climate Law 58, at 59; C. D. Stone, ‘Common but Differentiated Responsibilities in International Law’, (2004) 98 AJIL 276, at 281; S. Maljean-Dubois, ‘The Paris Agreement: A New Step in the Gradual Evolution of Differential Treatment in the Climate Regime?’, (2016) 25 Review of European, Comparative and International Environmental Law 151, at 151–2, 159. On differentiation in other fields of international law see Stone, ibid., at 278.

2 D. Bodansky, J. Brunnée and L. Rajamani, International Climate Change Law (2017), at 27.

3 T. Honkonen, ‘CBDR and Climate Change’, in M. Faure (ed.) Elgar Encyclopedia of Environmental Law (2016), 142, at 142. Criticizing the strategic combination of fairness and effectiveness of climate measures, E. A. Posner and D. Weisbach, Climate Change Justice (2010), at 5, 192. Against this criticism M. Prost and A. T. Camprubí, ‘Against Fairness?: International Environmental Law, Disciplinary Bias, and Pareto Justice’, (2012) 25 LJIL 379, at 389–91.

4 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, 1771 UNTS 107 (‘UNFCCC’).

5 1997 Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, 2303 UNTS 162 (‘Kyoto Protocol’).

6 The Paris Agreement always uses the qualifier ‘respective capabilities’. As Art. 4(1) UNFCCC does not use this qualifier, we use the shorter term with the acronym CBDR. See L. Rajamani, ‘The Papal Encyclical & The Role of Common but Differentiated Responsibilities in the International Climate Change Negotiations’, (2015) 109 AJIL Unbound 142; and see Bodansky et al., supra note 2, at 221.

7 Paris Agreement, Dec. 1/CP.21 Annex, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2015/10/Add.1 (2016) (‘Paris Agreement’).

8 Report of the Conference of the Parties Serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement on the third part of its First Session, Held in Katowice from 2–15 December 2018, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.1 (2019), UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.2 (2019); Report of the Conference of the Parties Serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement on its Second Session, Held in Madrid from 2–15 December 2019, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2019/6/Add.1 (2020). Decisions specifying the UNFCCC and the Kyoto Protocol were also considered as ‘rulebook’. UNFCCC, ‘A Guide to the Climate Change Convention Process’, available at unfccc.int/resource/process/guideprocess-p.pdf, at 6–7, 11.

9 V. Tørstad and H. Sælen, ‘Fairness in the Climate Negotiations: What Explains Variation in Parties’ Expressed Conceptions?’, (2017) 18 Climate Policy 642, at 643; L. Rajamani and E. Guérin, ‘Central Concepts in the Paris Agreement and How they Evolved’, in D. Klein et al. (eds.), The Paris Agreement on Climate Change: Analysis and Commentary (2017), 74, at 87; see Voigt and Ferreira, supra note 1, at 60; J. Huang, ‘Climate Justice: Climate Justice and the Paris Agreement’, (2017) 9(1) Journal of Animal & Environmental Law 23, at 25, 27; F. Soltau, Fairness in International Climate Change Law and Policy (2009), at 7, 133, 177, 187, 224.

10 L. Rajamani, ‘Ambition and differentiation in the 2015 Paris Agreement: Interpretative possibilities and underlying politics’, (2016) 65 ICLQ 493; see Voigt and Ferreira, supra note 1; Huang, ibid., at 9.

11 E.g., A. Gajevic Sayegh, ‘Climate Justice after Paris: A Normative Framework’, (2018) 13 Journal of Global Ethics 344; S. P. Murphy, ‘Global Political Process and the Paris Agreement: A Case of Advancement or Retreat of Climate Justice?’, in T. Jafry, M. Mikulewicz and K. Helwig (eds.), Routledge Handbook of Climate Justice (2019), at 80–2; Z. Mi et al. ‘Assessment of Equity Principles for International Climate Policy Based on an Integrated Assessment Model’, (2019) 95(1-2) Natural Hazards 309.

12 C. P. Carlarne and J. D. Colavecchio, ‘Balancing Equity and Effectiveness: The Paris Agreement & The Future of International Climate Change Law’, (2019) 27 New York University Environmental Law Journal 107.

13 On the importance of implicit criteria without references to the terms of differentiation see Stone, supra note 1, at 277.

14 ‘CMA’ stands for ‘Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement’.

15 Precision is decisive for the bindingness of obligations. L. Rajamani, ‘The 2015 Paris Agreement: Interplay Between Hard, Soft and Non-Obligations’, (2016) 28 Journal of Environmental Law 337, at 343. Evaluating compliance based on own normative benchmarks but without evidence in the legal text see Climate Analytics and New Climate Institute, ‘Climate Action Tracker (CAT): Comparability of Effort’, available at climateactiontracker.org/methodology/comparability-of-effort; Y. R. Du Pont et al. ‘Paris Equity Check: How Fair Are Countries’ Climate Pledges?’, available at paris-equity-check.org/multi-equity-map.html.

16 See Carlarne and Colavecchio, supra note 12, at 141.

17 Cf. supra note 11.

18 D. Schlosberg, ‘Climate Justice and Capabilities: A Framework for Adaptation Policy’, (2012) 26 Ethics & International Affairs 445.

19 L. Rajamani and D. Bodansky, ‘The Paris Rulebook: Balancing International Prescriptiveness with National Discretion’, (2019) 68 ICLQ 1.

20 Paris Agreement, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 12th preambular recital, Arts. 1, 2(1), 4(14), (16), 5(1), (2), 7(7)(b), 9(1), (8), (9), 10(3), (5), 11(2), (5), 13(3), 13(4), (5), (13), 16(1), 16(2), (3), (5), (8), 17, 18, 19(1), 20(1), 21(1), (2), 22, 23(1), 24, 28(3).

21 Adoption of the Paris Agreement, Dec. 1/CP.21, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2015/10/Add.1 (2016) (Dec. 1/CP.21), 11th preambular recital, paras. 60, 61, 80, 106(a), 107, 108.

22 These are subsequent agreements. See 1969 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties 1155 UNTS 331 (VCLT), Art. 31(3)(a); see also Rajamani, supra note 10, at 500, footnote 52.

23 UNFCCC, Art. 7; Kyoto Protocol, Art. 13(1); Paris Agreement, Art. 16(1).

24 See Carlarne and Colavecchio, supra note 12, at 116.

25 Considering Arts. 31 and 32 to be customary law, see Report of the International Law Commission, Seventieth Session (30 April–1 June and 2 July–10 August 2018), UN Doc. A/73/10 (2018), 13. Considering them as emerging customary law, M. E. Villiger, Commentary on the 1969 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (2009), at 439–40, paras. 37–8.

26 Terms appearing several times in one paragraph are counted only once.

27 Preambles are part of the treaty (VCLT, Art. 31(2)). They include its aims, recognized ‘facts, principles, or ideas’. See Carlarne and Colavecchio, supra note 12, at 120; M. M. Mbengue, ‘The Notion of Preamble’, in R. Wolfrum (ed.), The Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law (2008). Preambles can be taken up in other rules. However, if preambles are vague, their binding effect is limited. Defining preambles as unbinding, M. P. Carazo, ‘Contextual Provisions (Preamble and Article 1)’, in D. Klein et al. (eds.), The Paris Agreement on Climate Change: Analysis and Commentary (2017), 107, at 107.

28 See Rajamani, supra note 6, at 143; Bodansky et al. supra note 2, at 27.

29 M. G. den Elzen and P. L. Lucas, ‘The FAIR model: A Tool to Analyse Environmental and Costs Implications of Regimes of Future Commitments’, (2005) 10 Environmental Modeling & Assessment 115, at 117, Table 1.

30 Referring to the right to development, Paris Agreement, 11th preambular recital and Dec. 1/CP.21, 7th preambular recital. See also Tørstad and Sælen, supra note 9, at 644–5; Stone, supra note 1, at 277. Outside the context of climate agreements, see Declaration on the Right to Development, UN Doc. A/RES/41/128 (1986).

31 References to sovereign equality speak against differentiation. See UNFCCC, 8th and 9th preambular recital, Art. 18; Kyoto Protocol, Art. 22; Paris Agreement, Art. 25; Amendment to the Kyoto Protocol Pursuant to its Article 3, Paragraph 9 (the Doha Amendment), Dec. 1/CMP.8, UN Doc. FCCC/KP/CMP/2012/13/Add.1 (2013) (‘Doha Amendment’), footnote 12; Paris Agreement, Art. 13(3).

32 The term ‘capabilities’ is used in the principle of CBDR (supra note 6), in UNFCCC, Art. 7(2)(b), (c); Kyoto Protocol, Art. 13(4)(c), (d); Doha Amendment, footnotes 7, 9, 11; Paris Agreement, Arts. 13(12), 15(2).

33 ‘Vulnerability’ is used in UNFCCC, 19th preambular recital, Arts. 3(2), 4(4), (10); Kyoto Protocol, Arts. 12(8), 12ter; Paris Agreement, 5th, 9th, 11th preambular recital, Arts. 6(6), 7(1), (2), (5), (6) (9)(c), 9(4), 11(1). Discussing vulnerability as a criterion of differentiation, Carlarne and Colavecchio, supra note 12, at 114, 132–4, 144, 159, 161–2.

34 See Posner and Weisbach, supra note 3, at 125–6.

35 In this article, the term ‘emissions’ is used for greenhouse gas emissions.

36 On the principle of CBDR, see Paris Agreement, 3rd preambular recital, Arts. 2(2), 4(3), 4(19); Matters relating to the implementation of the Paris Agreement, Dec. 3/CMA.1, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.1 (2019) (‘Dec. 3/CMA.1’), 3rd preambular recital. Referring to historical and current responsibility, UNFCCC, 3rd preambular recital. Referring to all three time dimensions, Carlarne and Colavecchio, supra note 12, at 117; Rajamani, supra note 6, at 145–6; Voigt and Ferreira, supra note 1, at 294; den Elzen and Lucas, supra note 29, at 117, Table 1; R. Dellink et al. ‘Sharing the Burden of Financing Adaptation to Climate Change’, (2009) 19 Global Environmental Change 411, at 411.

37 On this criterion see Schlosberg, supra note 18, at 449.

38 UNFCCC, Arts. 3(2), (2)(a), 4(1), 7(2)(b), (c); Kyoto Protocol, Arts. 2(1)(a), (4), 10(1), 13(4)(c), (d); Paris Agreement, 5th preambular recital, Arts. 4(4), 13(12).

39 UNFCCC, 18th preambular recital, Art. 4(1), (7); Kyoto Protocol, Art. 10(1); Paris Agreement, 10th preambular recital, Arts. 7(d), 9(3), 13(5).

40 UNFCCC, 3rd preambular recital.

41 World Bank, ‘World Bank Open Data, CO2 emissions (metric tons per capita) 2014’, available at api.worldbank.org/v2/en/indicator/EN.ATM.CO2E.PC?downloadformat=excel; World Bank, ‘World Bank Open Data, CO2 emissions (kt) 2014’, available at api.worldbank.org/v2/en/indicator/EN.ATM.CO2E.KT?downloadformat=excel.

42 D. H. Meadows et al., The Limits to Growth: The Club of Rome’s Project on the Predicament of Mankind (1972).

43 See also Carlarne and Colavecchio, supra note 12, at 114.

44 See Maljean-Dubois, supra note 1, at 151–2; Rajamani and Bodansky, supra note 19, at 5.

45 UNCCC, 6th preambular recital, Arts. 3(1), 4(1). Art. 7(2)(b), (c) refer to ‘differing circumstances, responsibilities and capabilities’. The principle of CBDR was first included in the Report of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, Annex I, Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, UN Doc. A/CONF.151/26 (Vol I) (1992) (‘Rio Declaration’), principle 7.

46 Kyoto Protocol, Art. 10(1). The Doha Amendment entered into force as from 31 December 2020. One hundred and forty-seven of the 192 parties of the Kyoto Protocol had ratified the Doha Amendment by then. Kyoto Protocol, Arts. 20(4), 21(7). The Doha Amendment refers to the principle of CBDR in footnotes 7, 9, 11.

47 Paris Agreement, 3rd preambular recital, Arts. 2(2), 4(3), 4(19).

48 Dec. 1/CP.21, para. 27; Dec. 3/CMA.1, 3rd preambular recital; Chile Madrid Time for Action, Dec. 1/CMA.2, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2019/6/Add.1 (2020) (‘Dec. 1/CMA.2’), para. 6.

49 This is also expressed by the term ‘common concern of humankind’ in UNFCCC, 1st preambular recital and Paris Agreement, 11th preambular recital.

50 See Rajamani, supra note 6, at 143; Carlarne and Colavecchio, supra note 12, at 117.

51 See also supra note 36. Referring responsibility also to slavery or colonialism, C. C. Ngang, ‘Differentiated Responsibilities under International Law and the Right to Development Paradigm for Developing Countries’, (2017) 11 Human Rights & International Legal Discourse 270, at 273–4. Apart from the missing reference to climate change, it seems difficult to refer these historical developments to concrete criteria for differentiation.

52 P. Vetter, W. Schmid and R. Schwarze, ‘Spatio-Temporal Statistical Analysis of the Carbon Budget of the Terrestrial Ecosystem’, (2016) 25 Statistical Methods & Applications 143.

53 See also ibid.

54 See World Bank, supra note 41, ‘World Bank Open Data, CO2 emissions (kt) 2014’.

55 S. J. Davis and K. Caldeira, ‘Consumption-Based Accounting of CO2 Emissions’, (2010) 107 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 5687.

56 IPCC Working Group II, Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability, Contribution of Working Group II to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2014), at 421.

57 IPCC Working Group I, Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis, Contribution of Working Group I to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (2013), at 57.

58 Ibid., at 165, 288; see IPCC Working Group II, supra note 56, at 379, 382, 395.

59 P. Bou-Habib, ‘Climate Justice and Historical Responsibility’, (2019) 81 The Journal of Politics, at 1299.

60 Ibid., at 1307.

61 W. Nordhaus, ‘Projections and Uncertainties about Climate Change in an Era of Minimal Climate Policies’, (2018), 10(3) American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 333.

62 Future generations were not mentioned in the Kyoto Protocol, but the 11th preambular recital of the Paris Agreement refers to intergenerational equity. See also Section 2.2, infra.

63 See also supra notes 6, 47, 48.

64 UNFCCC, Art. 7(2)(b); Paris Agreement, 3rd and 5th preambular recital, Arts. 4(4), 4(6), 13(3), 13(12), 15(2).

65 Information to Facilitate Clarity, Transparency and Understanding of Nationally Determined Contributions, Referred to in Decision 1/CP.21, Paragraph 28, Dec. 4/CMA.1 Annex I, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.1 (2019) (‘Dec. 4/CMA.1 Annex I’), para. 4(a)(ii)(a.); Further Guidance in Relation to the Adaptation Communication, Including, inter alia, as a Component of Nationally Determined Contributions, referred to in Article 7, Paragraphs 10 and 11, of the Paris Agreement, Dec. 9/CMA.1, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.1 (2019) (‘Dec. 9/CMA.1’), 5th preambular recital; Setting a New Collective Quantified Goal on Finance in Accordance with Decision 1/CP.21, Paragraph 53, Dec. 14/CMA.1, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.2 (2019), para. 2.

66 Modalities, Procedures and Guidelines for the Transparency Framework for Action and Support Referred to in Article 13 of the Paris Agreement, Dec. 18/CMA.1 Annex, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.2 (2019) (‘Dec. 18/CMA.1 Annex’), para. 59.

67 See Prost and Camprubí, supra note 3, at 387–8.

68 A. C. Abeysinghe and G. Arias, ‘CBDR as a Principle of Inspiring Actions Rather than Justifying Inaction in the Global Climate Change Regime’, in O. C. Ruppel, C. Roschmann and K. Ruppel-Schlichting (eds.), Climate Change: International law and Global Governance, vol. II (2013), 235, at 238.

69 UNFCCC, Arts. 3(1), 4(2)(a) second sentence, 11(2). The Kyoto Protocol refers to the general principles of the UNFCCC in the 4th preambular recital.

70 Paris Agreement, 3rd, 8th, 11th preambular recital, Arts. 4(1), 14(1).

71 Dec. 1/CP.21, para. 103; Dec. 3/CMA.1, 3rd preambular recital; Dec. 4/CMA.1 Annex I, para. 6; Modalities, Work programme and Functions of the Forum under the Paris Agreement on the Impact of the Implementation of Response Measures, Dec. 7/CMA.1, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.1 (2019) (‘Dec. 7/CMA.1’), para. 4(f); Dec. 9/CMA.1, 5th preambular recital; Matters Relating to Article 14 of the Paris Agreement and Paragraphs 99–101 of Decision 1/CP.21, Dec. 19/CMA.1, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.2 (2019) (‘Dec. 19/CMA.1’), para. 10; Modalities and Procedures for the Effective Operation of the Committee Referred to in Article 15, Paragraph 2, of the Paris Agreement, Dec. 20/CMA.1 Annex, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.2 (2019) (‘Dec. 20/CMA.1 Annex’), paras. 5, 11; Dec. 1/CMA.2, 1st preambular recital; Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and Damage Associated with Climate Change Impacts and its 2019 Review, Dec. 2/CMA.2, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2019/6/Add.1 (2020) (‘Dec. 2/CMA.2’), 5th preambular recital, para. 40; Rules of Procedure of the Katowice Committee of Experts on the Impacts of the Implementation of Response Measures, Dec. 4/CMA.2 Annex I, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2019/6/Add.1 (2020) (‘Dec. 4/CMA.2 Annex I’), para. 11; Workplan of the Forum on the Impact of the Implementation of Response Measures and its Katowice Committee of Experts on the Impacts of the Implementation of Response Measures, Dec. 4/CMA.2 Annex II, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2019/6/Add.1 (2020), No. 9.

72 See also P. B. Gove, Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged (1986), at 815. Critically, M. White, ‘Equity – A General Principle of Law Recognised by Civilised Nations’, (2004), 4 Queensland University of Technology Law and Justice Journal 103, at 104, 111.

73 See White, supra note 72, at 104, 107.

74 M. Akehurst, ‘Equity and General Principles of law’, (1976) 25 ICLQ 801, at 809–10.

75 J. Pearsall and P. Hanks, The New Oxford English Dictionary of English (2001), at 623.

76 See Gove, supra note 72, at 769. Rightness is also emphasized by White, supra note 72, at 105–6.

77 T. M. Franck, Fairness in International Law and Institutions (1995), at 19.

78 J. Konow, ‘Which Is the Fairest One of All?: A Positive Analysis of Justice Theories’, (2003) 41 Journal of Economic Literature 1188, at 1194–5.

79 UNFCCC, Art. 4(2); Paris Agreement, Art. 4(1). See also Sections 3.1, 3.2, infra.

80 Paris Agreement, 8th preambular recital; Dec. 9/CMA.1, 5th preambular recital. The term ‘sustainable development’ is used in the 8th preambular recital, Arts. 2(1), 4(1), 6(1), (2), (4)(a), (8), (9), 7(1), 8(1), 10(5) of the Paris Agreement, in paras. 55, 109 of Dec. 1/CP.21.

81 UNFCCC, Art. 11(2); Dec. 1/CP.21, para. 103; Dec. 7/CMA.1, para. 4(f), (g); Dec. 20/CMA.1 Annex, paras. 5, 11; Dec. 2/CMA.2, para. 40; Dec. 4/CMA.2 Annex I, para. 11.

82 Paris Agreement, Art. 14(1); Dec. 19/CMA.1, para. 10.

83 UNFCCC, Art. 3(1). The 11th and 23rd preambular recital of the UNFCCC refer to different UNGA resolutions dealing with present and future generations.

84 Paris Agreement, 11th preambular recital.

85 See also the frequent mention of the term ‘sustainable development’. See supra note 80. On intergenerational equity and sustainable development, E. Brown Weiss, ‘Implementing Intergenerational Equity’, in M. Fitzmaurice, D. M. Ong and P. Merkouris (eds.), Research Handbook on International Environmental Law (2010), 100, at 114; B. Lewis, ‘The Rights of Future Generations within the Post-Paris Climate Regime’, (2018) 7 TEL 69, at 76.

86 See Carazo, supra note 27, at 117; Brown Weiss, ibid., at 85, at 110–13.

87 The discount rate lowers the relevance of future utility compared to current utility based on the assumption of progress. See, for example, Nordhaus, supra note 61, at 336, 340, 342, 347, 349–55. Critically, H. Kim, ‘An Extension of Rawls’s Theory of Justice for Climate Change’, (2019) 11 International Theory 160, at 162; Dellink et al., supra note 36, at 415.

88 E. Brown Weiss, ‘Intergenerational Equity: A Legal Framework for Global Environmental Change’, in E. Brown Weiss (ed.), Environmental Change and International law: New Challenges and Dimensions (1992), 385, at 393–5.

89 See also Sections 2.3, 2.4, infra.

90 The discount rate lowers the relevance of future utility compared to current utility based on the assumption of progress. See, for example, Nordhaus, supra note 61, at 336, 340, 342, 347, 349–55. Critically Kim, supra note 87, at 162; Dellink et al., supra note 36, at 415.

91 See also Brown Weiss, supra note 88, at 395.

92 See Brown Weiss, ibid.

93 Ibid., at 401–5; see Brown Weiss, supra note 85, at 102–3, 113.

94 E. Brown Weiss, ‘Climate Change, Intergenerational Equity and International Law: An Introductory Note’, Reprint: ‘In Fairness to Future Generations International Law, Common Patrimony, and Intergenerational Equity’, (1989/2008) 15(1-2) Vermont Journal of Environmental Law 615, at 625.

95 See also Lewis, supra note 85, at 76.

96 See supra note 80.

97 On the human rights perspective of intergenerational equity, see Huang, supra note 9, at 48–9. Critically, Lewis, supra note 85, at 76–8.

98 Draft Report of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee for a Framework Convention on Climate Change on the Work of its Second Session, Held at Geneva from 19 to 28 June 1991, UN Doc. A/AC.237/L.7 (1991), para. 30(a).

99 Compilation of Possible Elements for a Framework Convention on Climate Change, UN Doc. A/AC.237/Misc.2/Rev.1 (1991), at 23–7.

100 UNFCCC, Art. 3(1) and the Annexes; Kyoto Protocol, Annex B; Paris Agreement, 16th preambular recital, Arts. 2(2), 4(4), 9(3); Further Guidance in Relation to the Mitigation Section of Decision 1/CP.21, Dec. 4/CMA.1, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.1 (2019) (‘Dec. 4/CMA.1’), para. 5. On the leadership role see Bodansky et al., supra note 2, at 28; Maljean-Dubois, supra note 1, at 156–7; Voigt and Ferreira, supra note 1, at 61, 65, 67.

101 Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, UN Doc. A/Res/70/1 (2015) (‘SDGs’). Referring to the SDGs, Dec. 1/CP.21, 4th preambular recital; Preparations for the Implementation of the Paris Agreement and the First Session of the Conference of the Parties Serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Paris Agreement, Dec. 1/CP.24, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2018/10/Add.1 (2019), para. 10; Report of the Adaptation Committee, Dec. 9/CP.24, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2018/10/Add.1 (2019) (‘Dec. 9/CP.24’), paras. 6, 14, 14(b); Report of the Executive Committee of the Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and Damage Associated with Climate Change Impacts, Dec. 10/CP.24, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2018/10/Add.1 (2019), para. 5(c). Although being non-binding recommendations (Arts. 10, 11 of the UN Charter), resolutions of the UNGA can clarify the terms of differentiation as far as climate agreements refer to them.

102 See also F. Sindico, ‘Paris, Climate Change, and Sustainable Development’, (2016) 6 Climate Law 130.

103 Addis Ababa Action Agenda of the Third International Conference on Financing for Development, UN Doc. A/RES/69/313 (2015) (‘Addis Ababa Action Agenda’). Reference to this resolution is made in Dec. 1/CP.21, 4th preambular recital.

104 Dec. 9/CP.24, para. 14(b).

105 SDGs, Goals 4, 4(1), 6(1), 9(1), paras. 7, 25.

106 Ibid., Goal 17(10), para. 68.

107 Ibid., Goals 2(5), 15(6).

108 Ibid., para. 8.

109 Ibid., Goals 2(5), 4, 6, 9(1), 15(6), 17(1), paras. 7, 8, 25, 68.

110 Addis Ababa Action Agenda, paras. 6, 7, 10, 29, 78, 79, 105.

111 SDGs, 6th preambular recital, paras. 18, 53; Addis Ababa Action Agenda, para. 64. Using ‘intergenerational equity’, Addis Ababa Action Agenda, paras. 7, 10.

112 In other fields of international law, equity can aim at defining the proportionate share of a resource. See, for example, Gabcikovo-Nagymaros Project (Hungary v. Slovakia), Merits, Judgment of 25 September 1997, [1997] ICJ Rep. 7, at 56, para. 85.

113 The term ‘just’ also refers to structural changes in work life. See Paris Agreement, 10th preambular recital; Modalities, Work Programme and Functions under the Paris Agreement of the Forum on the Impact of the Implementation of Response Measures, Dec. 7/CMA.1 Annex, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.1 (2019), para. 2(b).

114 See Gove, supra note 72, at 1228.

115 See Pearsall and Hanks, supra note 75, at 993.

116 Ibid., at 992. See also Adam Smith’s reference to ‘right and wrong’: A. Smith, The Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759), at 502.

117 See also Carlarne and Colavecchio, supra note 12, at 124–5.

118 C. R. Beitz, ‘International Liberalism and Distributive Justice: A Survey of Recent Thought’, (1999) 51 World Politics 269, at 270.

119 Emphases added.

120 See also supra note 27.

121 J. Rawls, A Theory of Justice (1971). Rawls is aware of the role also of single actions for justice but considers institutions and rules to be the most relevant issue. Ibid., at 7, 9.

122 A. K. Sen, The Idea of Justice (2009), at 10, 15, 398–400.

123 See, for example, Konow, supra note 78, at 1195–9; Beitz, supra note 118, at 271–80, 283, 288, 292–5; J. E. Vinuales, ‘Balancing Effectiveness and Fairness in the Redesign of the Climate Change Regime’, (2011) 24 LJIL 223, at 232, 235.

124 See Kim, supra note 87.

125 See Rawls, supra note 121, at 4, 10, 11, 112–13.

126 J. Rawls, ‘Justice as Fairness: Political not Metaphysical’, (1985) Philosophy & Public Affairs 223, at 235.

127 See Rawls, supra note 121, at 7, 35; Rawls, supra note 126, at 235–7, 244, 342–3.

128 See Rawls, supra note 121, at 17, 35, 37–8, 112–13.

129 Ibid., at 17, 29; Rawls, supra note 126, at 227.

130 See Rawls, supra note 121, at 238, 343.

131 The limited scope and non-universality of Rawls ‘Theory of Justice’ concentrating on closed societies is partly misunderstood or ignored. See T. W. Pogge, ‘Moral Universalism and Global Economic Justice’, (2002) 1 Politics, Philosophy & Economics 29, at 42; Franck, supra note 77, at 13–14, 23; Sen, supra note 122, at 90, 143.

132 J. Rawls, ‘The Law of Peoples’, (1993) 20 Critical Inquiry 36.

133 See Rawls, supra note 132, at 46–7, 52.

134 Ibid., at 62; see also Beitz, supra note 118, at 276; Pogge, supra note 131, at 42.

135 See Rawls, supra note 132, at 62.

136 Ibid., at 47. Criticizing Rawls’ support requirement for being vague and suggesting that societies ‘must do what they can to assist’, Beitz, supra note 118, at 275.

137 See Rawls, supra note 132, at 47.

138 Ibid., at 37, 44–5.

139 Ibid., at 39, 63.

140 See, for example, Beitz, supra note 118; Pogge, supra note 131.

141 See Beitz, supra note 118, at 277.

142 See Sen, supra note 122, at 143, 172, 243, 251–3, 373. On collective identities, see Smith, supra note 116, at 188.

143 See Beitz, supra note 118, at 279.

144 See Sen, supra note 122, at 106–13. Applying Sen’s theory to climate issues, Schlosberg, supra note 18, at 452–6; S. Fesmire, ‘Pragmatist Ethics and Climate Change’, in D. E. Miller and B. Eggleston (eds.), Moral Theory and Climate Change: Ethical Perspectives on a Warming Planet (2020), 215.

145 See Sen, supra note 122, at 259, 266–7.

146 Ibid., at 383, 392.

147 See Smith, supra note 116, at 183, 309, 502, 527.

148 Sen, supra note 122, at 19, 44–5, 70, 117, 122–3, 128, 136–7, 305–9, 324, 402, 404 (footnote), 405; A. Sen, ‘Reason and Justice: The Optimal and the Maximal’, (2017) 92 Philosophy 5, at 18. See also Schlosberg, supra note 18, at 450–2.

149 See Sen, supra note 122, at 140, 157, 161.

150 ‘Capabilities’ include the freedom to do things a person has a reason to value and the actual opportunities of living. Sen, supra note 122, at 231–3.

151 Ibid., at 228–31, 235–8, 249, 265, 287, 310–14.

152 Ibid., at 226, 234, 253f.

153 Ibid., at 226–7, 234, 253.

154 Ibid., at 206–7, 271.

155 For example, a person with disabilities needs more resources than healthy persons. Hence, income is not the only indicator for capabilities. This logic can be transferred to all disadvantaged members of societies. See Sen, supra note 122, at 255–8, 262. These arguments become particularly relevant for adaptation. See Schlosberg, supra note 18, at 458. On people with disabilities, see also Paris Agreement, 11th preambular recital; Dec. 1/CP.21, 7th preambular recital.

156 See Sen, supra note 122, at 295, 298.

157 Ibid., at 239–41, 272–90, 298, 395; see also Smith, supra note 116, at 452.

158 Ibid., at 11–16, 57, 65–6, 90, 201, 105, 243, 251, 394–6, 397 (footnote).

159 Ibid., at 398–400; see also Sen, supra note 148, at 5, 17–18.

160 See Sen, supra note 122, at 57, 68, 70, 77, 80–2, 90–1, 108. Criticizing the empirical relevance of the maximin rule, Konow, supra note 78, at 1196.

161 Referring to global warming, Sen, supra note 148, at 18.

162 See Sen, supra note 122, at 249; Section 3.1, infra.

163 Action Aid International et al., ‘The People’s Demands for Climate Justice’, available at peoplesdemands.org; see Carlarne and Colavecchio, supra note 12, at 123.

164 Draft Paris Outcome: Revised Draft Conclusions Proposed by the Co-Chairs, UN Doc. FCCC/ADP/2015/L.6 (2015) (‘Draft Paris Agreement’), Art. 3(1)(e), Art. 11 Option 2 and paras. 21, 112; Carlarne and Colavecchio, supra note 12, at 121–2.

165 Draft Paris Agreement, para. 21.

166 SDGs, 8th preambular recital, Goal 16, paras. 3, 8, 35.

167 Addis Ababa Action Agenda, para. 18.

168 See supra notes 166, 167.

169 See supra note 167.

170 SDGs, para. 8.

171 Ibid., para. 35.

172 Para. 14 of the Lima Call for Climate Action remained relevant after Lima. Lima Call for Climate Action, Dec. 1/CP.20, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2014/10/Add.1 (2015). The draft in the Annex of Dec. 1/CP.20 also contained further references to fairness in paras. 16(1) Option 2, 35(2)(k) 76 Option 2, Option a(a), (b), 76(5)(d), 85 Option 1(c).

173 Dec. 1/CP.21, para. 27; Long-term Climate Finance, Dec. 3/CP.24, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2018/10/Add.1 (2019), para. 11; Dec. 4/CMA.1, para. 9; Dec. 4/CMA.1 Annex I, para. 6; Dec. 2/CMA.2, para. 40.

174 See Sen, supra note 122, at 72 (footnote).

175 A. S. Hornby, Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary of Current English (2005), at 548.

176 See Pearsall and Hanks, supra note 75, at 659.

177 See Gove, supra note 72, at 815.

178 Ibid. Also referring to judgments and evaluations, Murphy, supra note 11, at 72–3.

179 See Pearsall and Hanks, supra note 75, at 659.

180 See Gove, supra note 72, at 815.

181 See White, supra note 72, at 103.

182 See Rawls, supra note 121, at 142–3, 343–5; see also supra Section 2.3. Referring to Rawls’ but also including distributional aspects, Franck, supra note 77, at 7, 10–15, 23–5, 47; Soltau, supra note 9, at 7, 133, 177–227.

183 See Sen, supra note 122, at 9, 54, 62–3, 293–5.

184 See Konow, supra note 78, at 1189–92, 1202.

185 See Franck, supra note 77.

186 Ibid., at 7, 25, 47.

187 Ibid., at 13f., 23.

188 Ibid., at 10–15, 23.

189 J. Dator, ‘What Is Fairness?’, in J. Dator, D. Pratt and Y. Seo (eds.), Fairness, Globalization, and Public Institutions: East Asia and Beyond (2006), 19, at 27–8. See also supra note 62.

190 Emphases added.

191 Dec. 4/CMA.1, para. 7.

192 Dec. 1/CP.21, para. 27; Dec. 4/CMA.1, para. 9 (emphases added).

193 See supra note 34.

194 See also supra note 33.

195 See supra Section 2.1.

196 Framework for Meaningful and Effective Actions to Enhance the Implementation of Article 4, Paragraph 5, of the Convention, Dec. 4/CP.7 Annex, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2001/13/Add.1 (2002), paras. 12, 14.

197 The Cancun Agreements: Outcome of the Work of the Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-term Cooperative Action under the Convention, Dec. 1/CP.16, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2010/7/Add.1 (2011) (‘Dec. 1/CP.16’), para. 80(a). In this decision, the term ‘equitable’ was also used in the same context.

198 Rules of Procedure of the Advisory Board of the Climate Technology Centre and Network, Dec. 25/CP.19 Annex II, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2013/10/Add.3 (2014), para. 3.

199 Work Programme on Results-based Finance to Progress the Full Implementation of the Activities Referred to in Decision 1/CP.16, Paragraph 70, Dec. 9/CP.19, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2013/10/Add.1 (2014), para. 5.

200 Elements for a Draft Negotiating Text, Dec. 1/CP.20 Annex, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2014/10/Add.1 (2015), para. 16(1) Option 2.

201 B. Antonich et al., ‘Summary of the Lima Climate Change Conference 1-14 December 2014’, (2014) 12(619) Earth Negotiations Bulletin, available at enb.iisd.org/download/pdf/enb12619e.pdf, at 28, 31, 34; B. Antonich et al., ‘Lima Highlights: Friday, 5 December 2014’, (2014) 12(613) Earth Negotiations Bulletin, available at enb.iisd.org/download/pdf/enb12613e.pdf, at 4.

202 See Dec. 4/CMA.1 Annex I, para. 6; Dec. 2/CMA.2, para. 40.

203 SDGs, Goals 2(5), 15(6).

204 Addis Ababa Action Agenda, paras. 18, 22, 26, 36, 28, 98, 99, 101.

205 The authentic language versions are defined in UNFCCC, Art. 26; Kyoto Protocol, Art. 28; Paris Agreement, Art. 29.

206 We thank Donia Mahabadi for the translation of the Arabic version.

207 We thank Nicole Hoppe and Kostyantyn Vdovenko for the translation of the Russian version.

208 This point was made clear by John Rawls in discourse with Amartya Sen. See Sen, supra note 122, at 72–3.

209 VCLT, Art. 33(3).

210 See Villiger, supra note 25, at 459, para. 10.

211 VCLT, Art. 33(4).

212 See supra note 13.

213 Paris Agreement, Arts. 13(12), 15(2).

214 On the leadership role, Paris Agreement, Arts. 4(4), 9(3); see also supra note 100.

215 UNFCCC, 3rd, 10th, 20th, 21st, 22nd preambular recital, Art. 3(2), Annex I.

216 See Bodansky et al., supra note 2, at 222; Rajamani and Guérin, supra note 9, at 88; Tørstad and Sælen, supra note 9, at 650–1; Rajamani, supra note 10, at 494, 506, 513.

217 Paris Agreement, Art. 2(1).

218 See Voigt and Ferreira, supra note 1, at 65–7.

219 ‘Developed countries’ are mentioned in Paris Agreement, 16th preambular recital, Arts. 4(4), 9(1), (3)(5), (6), (7), 13(9). ‘Developing countries’ are used in Paris Agreement, 5th preambular recital, Arts. 4, 4(1), (4), (5), (6), (15), 5(2), 6(6), 7(2), (3), (6), (7)(d), (10), (13), (14)(a), 9(1)(3), (4), (5), (7), (9), 10(5), (6), 11(1), (2), (3), (4), 13(2), (3), (9), (10), (11), (12), (13), (14), (15).

220 See Rajamani and Guérin, supra note 9, at 88.

221 Paris Agreement, Art. 9(2), (5), 13(9), Art. 9(7).

222 See Maljean-Dubois, supra note 1, at 156; cf. Rajamani and Guérin, supra note 9, at 86.

223 Paris Agreement, Art. 9(2), (5).

224 Ibid., Art. 13(9).

225 Ibid., Art. 9(7).

226 See also supra note 214.

227 UNFCCC, Arts. 3(5), 4(3), (4), (5), (7), (8), (9), 5(b), (c), 6(b)(ii), 8(2)(c), 9(2)(d), 11(5), 12(4), (7), Annex II.

228 Paris Agreement, Arts. 3, 4(5), 7(13).

229 Ibid., Art. 9(3).

230 Modalities, Procedures and Guidelines for the Transparency Framework for Action and Support Referred to in Article 13 of the Paris Agreement, Dec. 18/CMA.1, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.2 (2019), 4th preambular recital; see Dec. 18/CMA.1 Annex, paras. 3, 5, 10(d), (e), 118.

231 See Dec. 18/CMA.1 Annex, para. 29.

232 UNFCCC, Art. 12(5); Paris Agreement, Arts. 4(6), 13(3); Dec. 18/CMA.1 Annex, para. 3(a), 11.

233 See Dec. 18/CMA.1 Annex, para. 143.

234 Paris Agreement, Art. 4(5).

235 Ibid., Art. 7(13).

236 See also ibid., Art. 3.

237 See also H. Winkler, ‘Mitigation (Article 4)’, in D. Klein et al. (eds.), The Paris Agreement on Climate Change: Analysis and Commentary (2017), 141, at 152.

238 See supra Section 2.1.

239 See supra note 38.

240 See supra note 39.

241 Paris Agreement, 10th preambular recital.

242 UNFCCC, 8th and 9th preambular recital, Art. 12(5); Doha Amendment, footnote 12; Paris Agreement, Arts. 13(3), 14(3); Dec. 1/CP.21, para. 91; Modalities and Procedures for the Operation and use of a Public Registry Referred to in Article 4, Paragraph 12, of the Paris Agreement, Dec. 5/CMA.1 Annex, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.1 (2019), para. 1(b); Dec. 9/CMA.1, para. 2(a); Modalities and Procedures for the Operation and use of a Public Registry Referred to in Article 7, Paragraph 12, of the Paris Agreement, Dec. 10/CMA.1 Annex, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.1 (2019), para. 1(d); Matters Referred to in Paragraphs 41, 42 and 45 of Decision 1/CP.21, Dec. 11/CMA.1, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.1 (2019), paras. 3, 10; Dec. 18/CMA.1 Annex, paras. B(3)(a), 148(VII)(A), 22, 150(c), 192; Dec. 20/CMA.1 Annex, para. I(4); Local Communities and Indigenous Peoples Platform, Dec. 2/CP.24, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2018/10/Add.1 (2019), 5th preambular recital; Dec. 19/CMA.1, paras. 3(c), 14.

243 Paris Agreement, Arts. 9(3), (4), 11(2); Types of Information to be Provided by Parties in Accordance with Article 9, Paragraph 5, of the Paris Agreement, Dec. 12/CMA.1 Annex, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.1 (2019) (‘Dec. 12/CMA.1 Annex’), paras. (j), (l); Technology Framework under Article 10, Paragraph 4, of the Paris Agreement, Dec. 15/CMA.1 Annex, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2018/3/Add.2 (2019), para. 25(c); Dec. 18/CMA.1 Annex, para. 121(p). The discretion is emphasized only for LDCs and SIDS in Dec. 1/CP.21, para. 91; Dec. 18/CMA.1, para. 4; Dec. 18/CMA.1 Annex, para. 11; Dec. 1/CP.21, para. 65 emphasizes country-driven strategies of all contracting parties and reminds of support of developing countries.

244 Paris Agreement, Art. 7(1).

245 Ibid., 9th and 11th preambular recital, 7th preambular recital, Arts. 7(5), (9)(c); Dec. 1/CP.21.

246 UNFCCC, Art. 4(9); Paris Agreement, 6th preambular recital, Arts. 4(6), 9(9), 11(1).

247 Paris Agreement, Art. 7(9)(c).

248 Ibid., 6th preambular recital, Arts. 9(9), 11(1), 13(3). See also UNFCCC, Arts. 4(9), (6), 12(5).

249 Paris Agreement, Arts. 4(6), 9(4), (9), 11(1), 13(3).

250 Paris Agreement, 5th preambular recital, Arts. 6(6), 7(2), (6), 9(4), 11(1).

251 The Paris Agreement and the Paris Rulebook use LDCs and SIDS as examples for particularly vulnerable developing countries. See Paris Agreement, Art. 11(1); see Dec. 12/CMA.1 Annex, para. (j).

252 UN Committee for Development Policy, Handbook on the Least Developed Country Category: Inclusion, Graduation and Special Support Measures (2018), available at www.un.org/development/desa/dpad/wp-content/uploads/sites/45/2018CDPhandbook.pdf, at 13, Box I.4.

253 United Nations, Committee for Development Policy, ‘List of Least Developed Countries (as of December 2018)’, available at www.un.org/development/desa/dpad/wp-content/uploads/sites/45/publication/ldc_list.pdf.

254 United Nations, ‘Sustainable Development Goals, Knowledge Platform’, availble at sustainabledevelopment.un.org/topics/sids/list.

256 See supra note 101.

257 L. Rajamani, Differential Treatment in International Environmental Law (2006), at 165.

258 Paris Agreement, Art. 4(6).

259 On the term ‘circumstances’ see supra Sections 2.1, 3.1.

260 Paris Agreement, Art. 9(4), (9).

261 Ibid., Art. 13(3).

262 Ibid., Art. 11(1).

263 Cf. supra Section 2.1.

264 Ibid.

265 Paris Agreement, Arts. 4(13), (14), 13(7)(a); Dec. 1/CP.21, paras. 31(a), (c), (d), 37.

266 Paris Agreement, Art. 4(6).

267 Kyoto Protocol, Arts. 6, 12, 17.

268 The Paris Agreement has formulated the framework for a new flexible mechanism in Art. 6 Paris Agreement but it is not yet established. E. Davies, ‘Recommendations for an International Carbon Currency Market under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement’, (2018) 12 CCLR 132.

269 Paris Agreement, Art. 6(2), (5); Dec. 1/CP.21, paras. 93(d), (f), 108.

270 Paris Agreement, Arts. 7(7), 9(1).

271 Ibid., Art. 8.

272 Dec. 1/CP.21, paras. 42, 45, 46, 50, 127, 131.

273 Contracting parties ‘shall set a new collective quantified goal from a floor of USD 100 billion per year’ by 2020. Dec. 1/CP.16, para. 98; Dec. 1/CP.21, paras. 54, 115; Chile Madrid Time for Action, Dec. 1/CP.25, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2019/13/Add.1 (2020), para. 11. Criticizing this sum for not being part of the differentiation, Rajamani and Guérin, supra note 9, at 89.

274 UNFCCC, 3rd preambular recital.

275 See supra Sections 3.1, 3.2.

276 The Brazilian president Bolsonaro: ‘We preserve more [rainforest] than anyone. No country in the world has the moral right to talk about the Amazon. You destroyed your own ecosystems.’ See Z. Sullivan, ‘The Real Reason the Amazon Is on Fire’, Time, 26 August 2019, available at time.com/5661162/why-the-amazon-is-on-fire.

277 Kyoto Protocol, Art. 3(3), (4); Report of the Conference of the Parties on its Seventh Session, Held at Marrakesh from 29 October to 10 November 2001, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2001/13/Add.1 (2002) (Marrakesh Accords); Land use, Land-use Change and Forestry, Dec. 2/CMP.7, UN Doc. FCCC/KP/CMP/2011/10/Add.1 (2012).

278 These questions were negotiated in 2020. See Matters Relating to Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, Dec. 9/CMA.2, UN Doc. FCCC/PA/CMA/2019/6/Add.1 (2020); Terms of Reference for the Review of the Doha Work Programme on Article 6 of the Convention, Dec. 15/CP.25, UN Doc. FCCC/CP/2019/13/Add.2 (2020).

279 A. Lange et al., ‘On the Self-Interested Use of Equity in International Climate Negotiations’, (2010) 54 European Economic Review 359, at 363–4, 370.

280 See supra notes 15, 16.

281 Transparency and co-ordination problems are other reasons the Paris Agreement addresses without dissolving them.

282 See supra note 11.

283 See also Franck, supra note 77, at 368.

284 See also supra Section 2.4.

285 U. Will, ‘The Specification of Rules of Differentiation in the NDCs to the Paris Agreement’, available at www.europa-uni.de/de/forschung/institut/recap15/downloads/recap15_DP031.pdf, Section IV.

Figure 0

Table 1. Terms of differentiation in international climate agreements and subsequent decisions