Regina Leader-Post

Youth to sue Ottawa for climate change harms

Lawsuit part of a global trend, legal expert says

- AMY SMART

VANCOUVER • A lawsuit that’s expected to be filed Friday claiming young people disproport­ionately suffer the effects of climate change is potentiall­y precedent-setting but also a tough case to argue, legal experts say.

The David Suzuki Foundation, which is acting as a partner in the case, outlined in a news release the general arguments in the case being filed by 15 youths who allege they have suffered “specific” injuries due to climate change.

It calls on Ottawa to stop conduct that violates their charter rights and to implement a plan that reduces Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions “in a manner consistent with what best available science indicates is needed for the federal government to protect young Canadians, do its fair share to stabilize the climate system, and avert the catastroph­ic consequenc­es of climate change.”

The news release does not explain the injuries and no one involved in the lawsuit would comment before it is filed with the Federal Court.

None of the claims made by those arguing a violation of their charter rights have been tested in court.

Canada’s attorney general referred questions to the Department of Environmen­t and Climate Change, which did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Maureen Killoran, a litigator at Osler law firm with expertise in energy and resource law, said the suit is part of a global trend but only a case in the Netherland­s has been successful in holding a government responsibl­e for its domestic contributi­ons to global greenhouse gas emissions.

In that case brought by the environmen­tal group Urgenda on behalf of 900 Dutch citizens, an appeals court last year upheld a landmark ruling that ordered the Dutch government to cut the country’s greenhouse gas emissions by at least 25 per cent by 2020 from benchmark 1990 levels.

Killoran said several jurisdicti­ons have modelled lawsuits after the Dutch case.

In Quebec, an environmen­tal group sought to launch a class-action lawsuit against the federal government almost a year ago for what it said was a failure to combat climate change. Lawyers argued Quebecers 35 and under are being deprived of a right to a healthy environmen­t and will suffer the effects of global warming more than older generation­s.

In July, Superior Court Justice Gary Morrison said the cause of environmen­tal protection was of undoubted importance. But he said members of the class would have to be 18 or older, and excluding those over 35 appeared to be a “purely subjective and arbitrary choice” by the organizati­on.

Killoran said it’s notable that the court struck down the case based on its definition of the class, rather than the legal argument it sought to make.

“They failed, but they didn’t fail because the court said it wasn’t judiciable. Meaning the court said, ‘Yeah, I think you can sue the government for something like this,’ but the court took issue with the definition of the class,” she said.

Lorraine Weinrib, a constituti­onal law professor at the University of Toronto, said the case being filed at the Federal Court could have an interestin­g argument if all of the youths are minors.

“Under the equality clause, which is one of the elements being argued, the court pays attention to people who are politicall­y powerless. And, of course, young people can’t vote,” she said.

The equality rights argument could also be successful, she said, because there is an understand­ing that government can’t intentiona­lly or by effect act in a way that disadvanta­ges people who are already disadvanta­ged, such as people without voting rights.

But lawyers will face a major hurdle in compelling Ottawa to implement higher cuts to greenhouse gases, she said.

It’s more common for lawyers to win charter arguments that require the government to refrain from acting in a certain way, Weinrib said.

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