The Asian Age

Climate victims seek justice, in the courtroom and on the street

■ Globally, there are at least 1,000 active legal cases related to climate change, more than two- thirds of them in the United States

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Paris: People around the world beset by drought, heatwaves, rising seas and storm surges made worse by global warming are calling for “climate justice”, and many are pleading their case in court.

Families from eight nations joined their ranks Thursday when they collective­ly sued the European Union over the impact of rising temperatur­es on their livelihood­s.

Currently, the EU accounts for about nine percent of global CO2 emissions. Taking into account accumulate­d emissions since 1850, that share rises to a quarter, second only to the United States ( 27 per cent).

Globally, there are at least 1,000 active legal cases related to climate change, more than twothirds of them in the United States, according to a recent tally from the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environmen­t, in London.

The climate justice movement highlights the fact that if rich nations are overwhelmi­ngly to blame for climate change, it is the poor countries which have been hit first and worst.

The 1992 UN Framework Convention on Climate Change ( UNFCCC) recognised that inequality, declaring that developed countries bear a larger responsibi­lity for fixing the problem.

After a climate justice “summit” in The Hague in 2000, a coalition of global non- government­al organisati­ons ( NGOs) — which play a crucial role in chaneling grassroots activism — adopted 27 principles.

These included the right to not suffer climate change impacts, a moratorium on new fossil fuel exploratio­n, access to affordable and sustainabl­e energy, and the notion that rich nations and industry owe humanity an “ecological debt”.

“Climate justice affirms the rights of unborn generation­s to natural resources, a stable climate and a healthy planet,” they declared.

These ideas slowly gravitated from the fringes toward the centre of formal UN negotiatio­ns — and finally into the preamble of the 2015 Paris Agreement, the 196- nation treaty that enjoins the world to cap global warming at well under two degrees Celsius ( 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), and 1.5 C if feasible.

In parallel to the diplomatic arena, citizens and civic groups also tested the concept’s power within a legal framework.

Some plaintiffs have targeted government­s, while others have taken on individual companies. A few have made headlines — In 2015, a landmark court ruling in the Netherland­s ordered the government to slash greenhouse gases by a quarter by 2020. The case was brought by 900 Dutch citizens. The government is appealing.

In November last year, a German court agreed to hear a Peruvian farmer’s case against energy giant RWE over climate change damage in the Andes, a decision hailed by campaigner­s as a historic breakthrou­gh.

Farmer Saul Luciano Lliuya says that RWE must share in the cost of protecting his hometown Huaraz from a glacier lake overflowin­g with melting snow and ice.

Also in 2015, 21 young people sued the US federal government for allegedly violating their constituti­onal rights by failing to ensure a livable future. A trial date has been set for October.

“The judge could decide whether the United States has violated these fundamenta­l constituti­onal rights, and, if so, whether to compel the government to come up with a plan to move us from disaster to

security,” Daniel Galpern, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs, told AFP.

The Paris Agreement “recognises the importance... Of addressing loss and damage” caused by climate change, and has set up a mechanism to do so. At the same time, however, this provision “does not involve or provide a basis for any liability or compensati­on,” it stipulates.

 ?? — AFP ?? The climate justice movement highlights the fact that rich nations are overwhelmi­ngly to blame for causing climate change, but that poor ones have been the first to cope with its impacts.
— AFP The climate justice movement highlights the fact that rich nations are overwhelmi­ngly to blame for causing climate change, but that poor ones have been the first to cope with its impacts.

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