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Climate change cases predicted to make a legal splash in 2018As legal claims stack up against governments and some of the world’s biggest oil and energy companies, experts say there is a growing trend towards more litigation around climate change.Image Source: Mark Dixon from Pittsburgh, PA,CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
A clutch of high-profile legal cases over responsibility for the effects of
climate change will be fought out in courtrooms next year as claims stack up
against both governments and some of the world’s biggest oil and energy
companies.
Lawsuits in the United States brought by young activists and several
Californian cities are most likely to make waves, but legal action by a
Peruvian farmer in Germany and Greenpeace in Norway could also cause
ripples, said lawyers and academics.
“There is a trend towards more
litigation around climate change, and probably the lack of political action
in the United States may increase that trend,” said Sophie Marjanac, a
London-based lawyer at non-profit environmental law group ClientEarth.
“Where there’s an abdication of leadership on climate action, I think the
courts will have a greater role to play,” she told the Thomson Reuters
Foundation.
Lawyers and campaigners are closely watching the looming legal battles they
say could set the stage for fresh claims against major oil and industrial
companies, and pressure governments to ramp up action on climate change.
With U.S. President Donald Trump and his cabinet members named as
defendants, the Juliana v. United States case brought by 21 young activists
from Oregon is set to be one of the most closely followed in 2018.
In the federal case, scheduled for trial in February, the plaintiffs hope to
establish that the government’s climate change policies have failed to
protect their constitutional right to live in a habitable environment.
The case remains locked in legal limbo, however, as the government tries to
block it from proceeding.
Lawyers and academics say Juliana builds on the groundbreaking Urgenda case
brought by hundreds of Dutch citizens in 2015, which saw the government
ordered by a district court to accelerate reductions of greenhouse gas
emissions.
However, that outcome is now being appealed, with a decision likely early
next year.
Elsewhere, a January judgment is expected in a case brought by Greenpeace
Nordic and environmental group Nature and Youth against Norway, which they
claim has breached its pledge to combat climate change by granting oil and
gas exploration rights.
History repeating?
Some lawyers and researchers say claims seeking specific damages from energy
and industrial companies for actions that may have contributed to climate
change could have a bigger impact than constitutional cases.
A successful ruling against a heavyweight corporate could potentially
unleash a wave of similar claims, say case watchers, who reference
long-running fights against tobacco, asbestos and pesticide manufacturers
over harm to human health.
At least seven Californian cities and counties have brought lawsuits against
major fossil fuel companies. San Francisco and Oakland are seeking billions
of dollars to help protect against rising sea levels they blame on climate
change.
“Why should taxpayers and impacted communities alone bear the growing costs
of climate impacts when fossil fuel companies have played an outsized role
in making the problem worse?” said Peter Frumhoff, director of science and
policy at the Union of Concerned Scientists, after Santa Cruz city and
county both filed lawsuits this month.
Tracy Hester, a lecturer at the University of Houston Law Center, said such
claims could “redefine the rules of the game”. “They’re essentially not
trying to bring a global claim that’s going to lock up all these issues in
one court… they’re different in that they’re seeking damages,” he said.
Trump’s move to pull out of the Paris climate change accord and roll back
environmental regulations means campaigners are increasingly resorting to
litigation, as they did under former President George W. Bush, said case
watchers.
Mitigation not litigation
While climate-related suits are not new, scientific advances could bolster
plaintiffs as they try to pin responsibility for climate change on
particular polluters.
A German court has agreed to hear evidence in a case brought by Peruvian
farmer Saúl Luciano Lliuya against RWE AG, asking the power giant to pay to
reinforce a lake above his village dangerously swollen by glacial melt he
says is caused by global warming the company contributed to.
Yet while there has been a steady rise in cases seeking to hold corporations
and governments to account, few make it to court and legal action is largely
limited to richer countries.
Despite a few exceptions - including a farmer who successfully sued
Pakistan’s government in 2015 - mitigating rather than litigating against
climate change is favoured in poorer countries where legal success is less
likely, according to Cosmin Corendea, a legal expert at the United Nations
University in Bonn.
But the knock-on effect of rulings on companies and governments could
eventually be felt around the world, including in countries already
struggling with climate change impacts.
“The decision of the court echoes,” said Corendea. “It’s important in
climate change litigation to have this kind of momentum.”
By: Thomson Reuters Foundation
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