Published on 12:00 AM, August 10, 2019

Indigenous and women’s rights can boost climate fight: UN

Indigenous peoples said on Thursday that a United Nations report on climate change had for the first time recognised their land rights as important for curbing global warming.

The special report by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), written by more than 100 scientists, called for big changes to land use, farming and eating habits to help cut emissions that are heating up the Earth.

“Finally, the world’s top scientists recognise what we have always known,” said indigenous leaders from 42 countries in a statement coordinated by the Rights and Resources Initiative, a U.S. based coalition promoting community-based forest ownership.

“Failure to legally recognise our rights leaves our forests vulnerable to environmentally destructive projects that devastate forests and release massive amounts of carbon into the atmosphere.”

The IPCC met this week in Geneva, Switzerland, to finalise the report, intended to guide governments tasked with implementing the 2015 Paris Agreement to limit climate change.

Thursday’s IPCC report called for wiser land use, including protecting forests from being cut down for crops and grazing, and eco-friendly farming that uses fewer chemicals, such as fertiliser which emits planet-warming nitrous oxide.

Indigenous people customarily own more than 50% of the world’s lands, yet governments only recognise their ownership rights to 10%, they said.

“This gap between our legal and customary rights renders us and our lands vulnerable to the growing threats of agro-industrial production, destructive mining and logging practices, and large-scale infrastructure developments,” they said.

Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, UN special rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation there had been “a betrayal” and lack of political will to protect indigenous people’s land rights.

The IPCC also called for more support for poor farmers, particularly women, to limit the impacts of extreme weather and creeping deserts and enable them to feed their families.