Briefing: Children's rights and toxics

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"We just don’t understand it: why do adults tell us the environment is so important and still treat it so badly? They care about other things like money and their possessions but it seems they don’t care about destroying nature."

Children addressing the Committee on the Rights of the Child, 2016.

 

Introduction

Under the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) children are entitled to live, learn and grow in a physical environment that facilitates health, play, and education, and is free from undue risk. These rights are violated daily by toxic substances – especially in the air, water, soil, and consumer products – that harm millions of children worldwide.

This briefing outlines the causes and extent of the problem, and proposes an approach towards effective remedy and prevention.

 

Susceptibility

All humans are vulnerable to the effects of exposure to toxic substances (hereafter toxics), but children are more susceptible than adults on account of their smaller bodies and particular behavioural habits. Children consume more food and water relative to their weight, absorb toxics more readily, and are less able to excrete them afterwards. For example, young children absorb between four and five times as much lead as adults. Contact with toxics also impairs development, particularly of the lungs, brain, the immune system, and fertility, which are especially vulnerable to environmental influences in childhood.

These risks affect all children, including in economically developed countries. However, the problem is magnified by factors associated with poverty and other forms of marginalisation. The poorer health associated with economic deprivation reduces children’s resilience to the effects of toxics, particularly when children are malnourished, while the weaker regulation of industry and agriculture in poorer countries allows conditions of high toxicity to persist in places where children live, learn and play.

Children have higher levels of exposure and are also more sensitive to it, which makes them more vulnerable than adults. Such impacts can be irreversible and can even be passed down from one generation to the next.

 

Exposure

The greatest global medium of toxic exposure is polluted air, of which the main causes are: burning fossil fuels for energy, manufacturing, and transport; burning solid fuel in the home such as coal or wood; second-hand cigarette smoke; and airborne agricultural chemicals such as pesticides. Nine out of ten people on the planet are now breathing unsafe ambient air, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), and four out of ten cook using open fires in the home, which produce high concentrations of pollutants. For these reasons, air pollution is responsible for five percent of all deaths annually, according to the WHO. Air quality is worsening in affluent countries, but people in poorer countries still suffer by far the worst conditions.

In certain localities, the air, water, and soil are particularly polluted, such as in industrial zones, areas of industrial agriculture, and derelict sites of war, where children may be exposed continuously to hazardous concentrations of contaminants. For example, 60 percent of child labourers worldwide work in agriculture, where pesticides are known to harm the health of millions of farmworkers every year. Children working on tobacco farms in the United States suffer symptoms of pesticide exposure and nicotine poisoning. Similarly, street children who collect electronic waste from rubbish dumps inhale a cocktail of toxics when they burn off the plastics to harvest scraps of saleable metals. Whereas middle- and high-income households are likely to move away from highly polluted localities, poorer families cannot, and so their children bear the brunt of the exposure.

Children’s behavioural habits, combined with their heightened susceptibility to toxics, increase the impact of exposure. Unlike adults, children play on the ground, and often in watercourses, exploring their physical world through touch and taste. On account of their age, children are also less able to appreciate and evaluate risks, or to read and pay attention to written warnings. For all these reasons, younger children are especially vulnerable. Exposure even begins before children are born; one study found an average of 200 hazardous substances in the blood of umbilical cords in a group of US-born babies, due to their mother’s exposure to polluted environments. This example illustrates well one of the challenges that toxics present: except for acute exposure to high doses, harmful exposure is not immediately evident. In fact, paediatricians refer to the present state of the impacts of pollution and contamination on children’s health as a “silent pandemic”.

In London, United Kingdom, a study revealed that tens of thousands of children at more than 800 schools, nurseries and colleges were being exposed to illegal levels of air pollution that risk causing lifelong health problems.
 

The health impact of toxics leads to secondary effects that engage children’s other fundamental rights. Sickness can prevent children from attending school and, later, going to work, for example, while exposure to certain substances, such as lead, can irreversibly impair brain development and thus retard children’s learning. Children may also be prevented entirely from playing outside, such as on days when air pollution reaches hazardous levels.
 

Known toxics and their effects

The actual and potential toxic effects of synthesised compounds and chemical elements released artificially from industrial processes are still not well understood. Hundreds of common substances are now known to be biologically or ecologically toxic, most of them previously believed to be safe. Three now-ubiquitous substances are especially harmful to humans, especially children on account of their heightened susceptibility.

Asbestos. Asbestos has been used extensively all over the world, particularly as a building material. Its microscopic fibres are the cause of debilitating respiratory conditions including the aggressive lung cancer, mesothelioma. The WHO estimated in 2004 that 125 million people are exposed to asbestos risks at work, leading to a high global burden of disease and 107,000 deaths annually. Asbestos is banned in the European Union but, in general, not elsewhere.

Pesticides. Most of the global population has been exposed to pesticides to differing degrees, mainly by inhaling airborne compounds, consuming them in food, and drinking contaminated water. Exposure has been linked to neurological diseases, degraded cognitive function, cancer, loss of fertility, and, particularly in children, impaired brain development. Each year, pesticides affect the health of as many as 41 million people and are responsible for 200,000 deaths through acute poisoning. Even low doses can be harmful, the effects typically not becoming apparent until years later.

Lead. A heavy metal, lead is used all over the world for a wide range of industrial applications: in batteries, water pipes and cisterns, paints, petroleum, and cable sheaths, for example. It becomes airborne through heating, can also contaminate soil and water, accumulates in organisms, and does not break down in the environment. Lead negatively affects the development of intelligence in children, even at low levels, and has been associated with behavioural problems and blood diseases. In 2009 the WHO estimated that lead exposure was responsible for 143,000 deaths annually and accounted for 0.6 percent of the world’s entire burden of disease.

Two further chemical elements—mercury and cadmium—are present in hazardous concentrations in certain localities, particularly near heavy industry and especially mines. Cadmium is also released through cigarette smoke, and mercury is released into the atmosphere when fossil fuels are burned. Like lead, mercury is dangerous even in small quantities, builds up in the food chain, and impairs brain development in children. Cadmium is carcinogenic and harms the kidneys and respiratory system.

According to the WHO, the five substances described above are among the nine chemicals that pose the greatest risks to public health (besides air pollution). The others are arsenic dissolved in drinking water, benzine in petrochemical products and tobacco, dioxins in food, and excessive (or insufficient) fluoride, all of which pose similar health risks, and especially to children.

Most children’s exposure is typically at a low daily level, but chronic, and involves a ‘cocktail’ of hundreds of common hazardous substances. The pollution in urban ambient air is likely to include lead, cadmium, mercury, benzine, carcinogenic silicates, and various toxic gases, which combine to magnify the harm to children, as well as to unborn children who are “pre-polluted” through expectant mothers’ exposure. In industrial and agro-industrial areas, hazardous chemicals are found in stronger concentrations, greatly increasing the risks.
 

The ecological dimension

Alongside the direct impact of toxics on human health, they also poison and degrade the ecosystem on which children and their families depend for food and work. Heavy metals like lead, cadmium and mercury, are readily distributed in watercourses and the soil, where they accumulate in animals and plants, including the human food chain. The build-up of mercury in fish stocks has exceeded safe levels in 66 countries, for example, particularly affecting coastal communities that depend on fish for protein. On land, repeated use of pesticides can exhaust and poison the soil and rivers, and kill off ecologically crucial organisms such as wild bees. In China, one-fifth of farmland is now contaminated by pesticides and heavy metals and 35,000 square kilometres of previously productive land is now unusable. Such damage to the life of the land, rivers and sea undermines access to sufficient healthy food, which particularly affects children’s development, while creating economic pressures on families whose income depends on a healthy ecosystem, such as farm workers.

In addition to harming children’s health, ecological degradation caused by toxic substances jeopardises the food security and long-term economic prospects of millions of children around the world.

 

Quantifying the impact

The WHO estimated in 2017 that 1.7 million annual deaths of children aged under five—a quarter of all infant deaths worldwide—are attributable to their physical environment, particularly air and water pollution, and poor sanitation.
 

More than half a million infant children die from respiratory problems, mainly attributable to polluted air—a greater toll even than that caused by malaria. The WHO estimates that children under five suffer 161 million person-years of illness due to causes associated with their physical environment. In addition, an unquantifiable number of children suffer subtle degradations in health, such as diminished intelligence due to low levels of lead exposure, for example. Children who survive exposure suffer retarded development and a burden of disease that can last into adulthood, jeopardising their economic prospects for the rest of their lives. Clearly, the impact of toxics in the environment has a sweeping, severe—and according to the WHO, entirely preventable—impact on children, particularly in the world’s poorest regions.
 

Children’s rights

Toxic exposure materially and unambiguously violates a wide range of children’s rights set out in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and other treaties. In view of children’s elevated susceptibility relative to adults, the Convention imposes enhanced obligations on States to safeguard them from harmful toxic exposure, as follows:

Rights related to children’s exposure. First among these are the rights to life, to “the highest attainable standard of health” and to develop as persons “to the maximum extent possible”. Exposure to toxics is also likely to breach several other rights under the Convention, including: to recreation and play, to education (when sickness, or the risk of it, caused by toxic exposure prevents children from going to school), and to information (about toxicants and their effects).

UN Special Rapporteur on toxics Baskut Tuncak also refers to the right to physical and mental integrity in his report on children’s rights and toxics, explaining that this right encapsulates the right of each human being, including children, to autonomy and self-determination over his or her own body. He further develops that a non-consensual physical or mental intrusion against the body constitutes a human rights violation and concludes that this right is implicated by human exposure to toxics, whether this is acute poisoning or low-level exposure to toxic substances.

According to the Special Rapporteur, the right to be heard is also inextricable from public health and environmental threats such as toxics and pollution. Article 12 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child prescribes that every child capable of forming this or her own views has a right to be heard and to influence decision-making processes that may be relevant in his or her life. This right is closely linked with the question of consent, explains the Special Rapporteur, and with the phenomenon of children being born “pre-polluted”. He urges States to prevent childhood exposure, in recognition of the right of present and future generations to be heard.

In addition, children who encounter toxics through work are engaged in hazardous labour, which is unlawful. Notably, these include nearly 100 million agricultural child labourers worldwide, most of whom are exposed to pesticides, and one million children working in mines.

Rights related to maternal exposure. Although the CRC’s definition of the child does not include the developing foetus, the treatment of a pregnant woman and the care of her foetus can have an impact on the right of the child once he or she is born. The Committee on the Rights of the Child has been clear that: “The care that women receive before, during and after their pregnancy has profound implications for the health and development of their children.” Accordingly, States have an obligation to prevent children’s exposure to toxics, as well as that of women of reproductive age.

“The Convention on the Rights of the Child makes it clear that States have an obligation to prevent exposure to toxics by children, as well as by women of reproductive age.” In his report to the Human Rights Council, which focuses on children’s rights, the UN Special Rapporteur on human rights and toxics gives a full analysis of children’s rights that are impacted by toxic chemicals, including the best interests of the child.
 

Rights related to ecological damage. The ecological harm of toxics further threatens children’s rights: to healthy food and water, to an adequate standard of living (when ecological degradation jeopardises children’s carers’ income), and to adequate housing (where lead paints or pipes, or asbestos are present).

Freedom from discrimination. The right to be free from discrimination is engaged by the disproportionate harm of toxics on children relative to adults, and particularly of children in poverty. If it is possible to reduce children’s exposure to toxics in affluent countries, then children in poorer countries are entitled to the same protection.

The overarching right to a healthy environment. Separately and together, these fundamental rights of children clearly preclude all toxic exposure, including chronic low-level exposure. Where the effects of substances are not well known, an abundance of caution should prevail, with a presumption against exposure. A clear implication of children’s legal rights is therefore that toxics should be progressively reduced and eliminated from the environment, rather than that children’s freedom to engage with their environment should be restricted. Since this can only be achieved by protecting ecology as a whole, children’s rights collectively indicate an overarching right to a healthy environment in which to live, learn and grow. This should be the cardinal principle of a rights-based approach to the problem.

Duty-bearers. In international law the duty to safeguard children’s rights is borne by States. Businesses, the activities of which account directly and indirectly for most childhood exposures, bear a “corresponding responsibility” to children, according to the UN Guiding principles on Business and Human Rights. The same principle has been elaborated by the Committee on the Rights of the Child. Where corporate impunity and political apathy persist, children suffer and die. States are legally obliged to ensure that businesses fulfil their responsibility to prevent toxic exposure, and States must be held to account for this in turn.

 

Challenges and ways forward

As with many problems facing the world, the toxification of our environment is economically driven. To minimise costs, corporations capitalise on corruption and weak governance. Meanwhile communities, especially in impoverished areas, are denied the right to shape decision-making that will affect them. At the same time, economic necessity entices poor families to service the very industries that pollute them and their children. Corporations are further aided by the complicity of consumers, particularly in economically developed countries. Compounding the problem are various factors that multiply the risk, including urbanisation, the drive for economic growth, and an expanding global population. Meanwhile, children most exposed to toxics are largely invisible and all but voiceless, lacking effective avenues for prevention and redress.

This sobering picture is nonetheless marked by some signs of progress. The use of lead in petrochemical products has almost been abolished, and the Minamata Convention promises to phase out the industrial use of mercury, although the existing presence of both elements in the soil and water will remain, potentially forever. Seventy percent of national constitutions now include environmental duties or rights, and the UN Human Rights Council may now formally recognise a human right to a healthy environment. In economically developed regions such as the European Union, the legislative framework has been progressively strengthened, often in the face of strong opposition by major corporations. As chemical manufacturers have been required to test and label products, some hundreds of toxics have had to be withdrawn for falling short of safety standards. All these developments point to growing awareness of the inescapable link between human rights and the ecology of our environment, but progress is slow. As one youth activist, Rheka Dillon-Richardson, has put it, changing laws is not enough; our relationship to nature must also change.

Following the recommendations formulated by the Special Rapporteur (SR) on human rights and toxics, Baskut Tuncak, an approach incorporating both preventive and remedial actions should be the way to make the change happen. This new approach should include:

1. A focus on prevention in the first instance: this is the best and often only means of ensuring access to an effective remedy.  As the SR says in his report, “the violation of a child’s physical integrity from toxics cannot be undone.” States and businesses have a shared responsibility to prevent childhood exposure to toxics.

Good practices should include legal prescriptions for precautionary or preventive measures in children’s best interests instead of prioritising businesses’ profits by using industrial chemicals that have not been tested. In cases where preventive steps have not been taken, States should be held liable and victims of violations should be allowed to access complaint procedures.

Companies must also focus on the prevention of exposure. This will require the modification, cessation or relocation of certain activities that present unmanageable or simply unknown risks to children. States should encourage innovative businesses dedicated to ensuring the safety of consumer products for children.

2. Laws and policies must prioritise the protection of children: States parties to the Convention on the Rights of the Child have a duty to take legislative and administrative measures to do this.

As an example, safeguarding children in and around high-risk localities—particularly industrial and intensive agricultural areas—should be achieved by reforming production methods and preventing all toxic emissions into the ecological and human environment.

Containing the economic drivers of environmental toxification—with or without the support of the businesses that profit from it—by means of legislation and mechanisms for effective enforcement and accountability should also be a national priority.

3. Strengthening global and national controls on highly toxic substances: this particularly concerns, but is not exclusive to, heavy metals and asbestos, and supporting economically underdeveloped countries to incorporate such controls in full. The global nature of the challenge, including the transnational nature of corporate structures and business relationships, requires strong international cooperation.

4. Holding businesses accountable: all businesses have a responsibility, as do the financiers and investors, to prevent childhood exposure. Directly and indirectly, business activities account for most childhood exposures to toxics. Most businesses sectors are directly or indirectly involved in the production, use, release or disposal of hazardous substances. Businesses must undertake children’s rights due diligence as required by General Comment No. 16 of the Committee on the Rights of the Child. Failure to conduct a reasonable degree of human rights due diligence for toxic chemicals can subject corporate executives to criminal charges.

5. Access to justice: access to complaints procedures and redress when  rights violations have occurred is crucial and must be part of the framework.

As long as polluters can act with impunity, they will; the cost to polluters of outsourcing the harm of their activity to children must outweigh the benefits. Above all else, therefore, children and their advocates must be provided, as is their legal right, with accessible and effective avenues to hold polluters to account before the law. In particular, children must be able to litigate, to ensure that victims are medically rehabilitated and paid adequate compensation, and that reoccurrence is prevented.

States have a duty to ensure that children have access to an effective remedy for violations of their rights, including those due to exposure from toxics. However, taking legal action for victims of hazardous substances and wastes brings up numerous challenges, especially for children, because of their special and dependent status. Barriers include:

  • The lack of awareness among victims that their diseases could have been caused by childhood exposure to toxic chemicals or pollution;

  • The burden of proof placed on children, including the need to establish causation: this burden is placed on victims to prove that a toxic chemical was the cause of their injuries, not on the businesses that profit from these activities to prove that they do no harm;

  • Fundamental information that has not been generated or is confidential about the hazards and uses of substances;

  • The challenges of identifying perpetrators;

  • Weak or non-existence of legislation preventing childhood exposure to pollution and toxic chemicals as well as providing access to an effective remedy for exposure and environmental contamination;

  • The costs of legal representation for plaintiffs.

Different types of actions and practicalities should be developed in order to allow child victims to obtain remedies but also for preventing violations’ recurrence by ensuring future laws and policies respect rights. Different tools are particularly relevant in the context of environmental damage:

Collective litigation and public interest litigation: these allow a number of claimants or victims to bring a case or a complaint together, are an effective way of challenging widespread or large scale violations such as those resulting from environmental damage ​while reducing the burden on any given child victim. ​Yet, less than half of States around the world allow collective litigation in some settings and only around 15 percent allow collective action across the board.

Intergenerational justice: this concept is also key in ensuring the protection of vulnerable groups, particularly children. In essence, the principle states that there should be distributive justice between generations and that the rights of different generations should be equal over time. The concept has been underdeveloped in national law, but has played an important role in litigation in several countries, including the Philippines, where it has been used to allow class actions for the enforcement of benefits to future generations. The principle takes on particular importance in the context of issues related to natural resources contamination by hazardous substances, to mitigate against short-termist policy that will affect the realisation of the rights of future generations.

Public interest cost protection: one of the most serious barriers to children accessing justice is the financial burden. Justice can be expensive but no one should be prevented from seeking justice for rights violations suffered because of an inability to finance their case. As legal aid is practically non​existent for the kinds of civil or public interest administrative cases that are likely to be used to bring environmental cases, other mechanisms should exist to encourage such collective actions of public interest.

The general principle is often that a losing party to litigation should pay the winner’s reasonable legal costs. To remove this burden in cases that are in the public interest, one of the mechanisms available to the Court to ensure access to justice in public interest litigation is the grant of a protective costs order. Consisting of excluding or limiting the liability in expenses of public interest litigants, this mechanism is already available in some countries for environmental cases, including in the United Kingdom. Developing this practice would greatly facilitate access to justice to victims of hazardous substances and wastes.

The burden of proof usually lies with victims, not with governments or businesses that use, produce or release hazardous substances that eventually pollute and often harm children. Placing the burden on victims of the effects of toxic chemicals to prove the cause of their illness can be a grave injustice.  In order to reduce the burden of proof on victims of hazardous substances and wastes, the Special Rapporteur on human rights and toxics recommends that States explore options to better balance the right of victims to justice and remedy. Indeed, an effective regulatory framework which monitors information about who manufactures, sells, uses, trades in, releases or disposes hazardous substances could reduce the barrier posed by having to demonstrate causation.

The Special Rapporteur further develops that greater accountability of businesses - which have the access, the control of relevant information and the power to generate it - can help to incentivise the development and adoption of safer alternatives that carry less risk of human rights abuses. Regulatory frameworks should also provide with “safe levels” of chemicals released in the environment as well as “safe levels” of exposure for children, taking into account their special vulnerability on the bases of real-life conditions, children being exposed to multiple substances during sensitive periods of childhood development”. With such regulations in place, it would be more difficult for perpetrators to evade accountability.

 

Useful resources:

 

Organisations advancing the cause of a toxic-free future:

  • IPEN is a global network of public interest health and environment NGOs working to eliminate toxic chemical hazards around the world. IPEN helps build the capacity of its participating organisations to influence local policy, create greater public awareness of toxics issues, and help their governments implement international policies, such as chemicals treaties and other chemical safety policy agreements.

  • Ban Toxics is an NGO working on issues related to toxic chemicals and waste and environmental justice, mainly in the Philippines. They work to promote awareness about harmful chemicals and the sound management of chemicals at all levels, through policy engagement with government agencies and policy makers, projects on the ground with communities; their main focus being on the sound management of mercury.

  • Pesticide Action Network International (PAN) is a network of non governmental organisations, institutions and individuals in over 90 countries working to replace the use of hazardous pesticides with ecologically sound and socially just alternatives. It is organised with five independent, collaborating Regional Centers that implement its projects and campaigns around the world.

  • Client Earth (UK) and the network 'Justice and environment' is a network of 13 organisations throughout Europe working on a project for 'access to justice for a greener Europe' which focuses on raising awareness about the legal possibilities available for citizens and NGOs to help protect the environment through access to justice.

  • The Access Initiative (TAI) is a network of organisations working to create a world where all people are able to meaningfully exercise rights to information, public participation and justice in decisions affecting the environment.

  • Basel Action Network (BAN) is a campaigning organization dedicated to ending toxic waste trade. They work to champion global environmental health and justice by ending toxic trade, catalyzing a toxics-free future, and campaigning for everyone’s right to a clean environment.

  • Women in Europe for a common future (WECF) is an international network of women’s and civil society organisations advocating for non-chemical alternatives worldwide, based on three principles: polluter pays, reversal of the burden of proof and the precautionary principle. WECF focusses in particular on the indoor environment of babies and children and engage parents, caregivers, medical personnel and decision makers in raising awareness of threats and creating safe environments, especially with reference to hazardous chemicals. One of their project is the Safe Toys coalition aiming at protecting children’s health by striving for a world free of toxic and unsafe toys.

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