Kuwait Times

Australian court rejects coal on climate grounds

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SYDNEY: An Australian court recently delivered a landmark ruling by rejecting plans to build a coal mine on the grounds it would worsen climate change. Chief Justice Brian Preston said a planned open cut coal mine in a scenic part of New South Wales state would be in “the wrong place at the wrong time”. The ruling by the New South Wales Land and Environmen­t Court was notable for citing not only local impacts of building the proposed Gloucester Resources mine, but also secondary “climate change impacts” of the eventual use of the coal.

“It matters not that this aggregate of the Project’s GHG (greenhouse gas) emissions may represent a small fraction of the global total,” the justice said. “Not every natural resource needs to be exploited.” The case was unusual in referring to the 2015 Paris Agreement and United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and calling climate scientists to testify. Will Steffen, a noted climatolog­ist, told the court that Australia’s average surface temperatur­e had increased one degree centigrade over the last century.

Baker & McKenzie’s global head of climate law, Martijn Wilder, said the decision reinforced the trend in legal judgments around the world that directly link fossil fuels and climate change. It also added to the growing perceived risk of coal investment­s, he told The Australian Financial Review. “In both Australia, and around the world, financiers have largely decided that, except in some exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, investment­s in coal are not viable and that such investment­s will now be stranded,” he said.

Climate activists have described the case as a “seminal judgment” in Australian law and hope that it sets a legal precedent. Australia is one of the world’s largest producers of coal and the world’s largest exporter — fuelling powerplant­s in Japan, China, South Korea and India. “It’s a judgment of enormous significan­ce,” said David Morris, a solicitor for Environmen­tal Defenders Office, which represente­d local residents against the project. “It heralds the arrival of climate litigation in Australia, the first time climate change has featured as a ground for refusal of a fossil fuel project in this country and, as far as I’m aware, anywhere,” he said. — AFP

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