The Guardian (Nigeria)

Unpreceden­ted climate case clears major hurdle in European court

- By Chinedum Uwaegbulam

TODAY, the European Court of Human Rights has announced its decision to green- light a first- of- itskind climate case against 33 countries.

Its “communicat­ion” of the case to the defendant countries now require each one of them to respond to the complaint filed by six Portuguese youth- applicants.

As the vast majority of cases filed with the Strasbourg court fail to reach this stage, this decision marks a major step towards a potential landmark judgment on climate change.

In another significan­t move, the court granted the complaint priority on the basis of the “importance and urgency of the issues raised”.

The countries being sued are: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech

Republic, Germany, Greece, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Croatia, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta, the Netherland­s, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerlan­d, the United Kingdom, Turkey and Ukraine.

The four children and two young adults from Portugal who are behind this case are asking the court to hold the countries accountabl­e for fuelling the climate crisis. Their complaint, which was filed with the support of the Global Legal Action Network ( GLAN), centres on the rising threat which climate change poses to their lives and to their physical and mental wellbeing. If successful, the defendant countries would be legally bound, not only to ramp up emission cuts, but also to tackle overseas contributi­ons to climate change, including those of their multinatio­nal enterprise­s.

One of the youth- applicants involved, André Oliveira ( 12), said: “It gives me lots of hope to know that the judges in the European Court of Human Rights recognise the urgency of our case. But what I’d like the most would be for European government­s to immediatel­y do what the scientists say is necessary to protect our future. Until they do this, we will keep on fighting with more determinat­ion than ever.”

According to Gerry Liston, Legal Officer with GLAN: “These brave young people have cleared a major hurdle in their pursuit of a judgment which compels European government­s to accelerate their climate mitigation efforts.

“This comes just weeks ahead of the EU decision on its 2030 emissions target. Nothing less than a 65 per cent reduction by 2030 will be enough for the EU Member States to comply with their obligation­s to the youth- applicants and indeed countless others.”

The defendant countries are now required to respond to the youth- applicants’ case by the end of February, unless a “friendly settlement” is reached. The youth- applicants, their lawyers and their experts will then have to respond to the defences of 33 countries. An internatio­nal crowdfundi­ng drive coordinate­d by GLAN is seeking funding to support this major effort.

The case was filed on the September 3, just after Portugal recorded its hottest July in 90 years. An expert report prepared for the case by Climate Analytics describes Portugal as a climate change “hotspot” which is set to endure increasing­ly deadly heat extremes.

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