and forcing corporations to account for promises they cannot keep
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The courtroom in Sydney's Queen's Square has rarely felt like the right place to argue about the future of the Great Barrier Reef or rising seawater in Torres Strait.
Yet across the past six years, that is precisely where some of the most consequential debates in Australian climate policy have played out before judges asked to interpret old laws in a warming world.
Australia has no Bill of Rights, no constitutional guarantee of a healthy environment, and no standalone Climate Act.
What it has, increasingly, is litigation. Citizens, community organisations, and activist investors are using consumer law, corporations law, administrative review, and planning statutes to do what federal legislation has not: hold emitters and governments accountable for what they say and what they do.
The results are messy, contested, and genuinely significant.
Two threads run through this legal story.
One is the search for a common law duty of care, a theory that governments and corporations owe future generations an obligation to reduce harm from climate change.
The other is the greenwashing wave: a surge of regulatory and activist litigation targeting companies whose environmental claims have outrun their actual conduct. Both are reshaping corporate behaviour faster than any parliamentary committee.
The Duty of Care That Keeps Failing
The most ambitious attempt to use tort law for climate accountability ended quietly on 15 July 2025. Justice Wigney of the Federal Court dismissed the class action brought by two Torres Strait Island elders, Uncle Pabai Pabai and Uncle Guy Paul Kabai, on behalf of the traditional inhabitants of the Torres Strait. 1
Their argument was precise: the Commonwealth owed them a duty to set emissions targets aligned with the best available science, and had breached that duty through a decade of inadequate action.
Justice Wigney declined to accept it. Emissions reduction targets, he found, involve matters of core government policy that courts are not equipped to adjudicate. 6
The reasoning tracked closely with the Full Federal Court's earlier reversal in Sharma, where a novel duty owed by the Environment Minister to school-aged children was initially recognised, then stripped on appeal in 2022. Together, the two cases draw a hard line around judicial intervention in climate policy: courts will hear the science, but they will not dictate the response.
That is not nothing. Justice Wigney also made a finding that if such a duty had existed, the Commonwealth would have been in breach for failing to set targets consistent with the best available science. It is a judicial aside, technically irrelevant to the outcome, and yet it sits in the record. The applicants have filed an appeal to the Full Federal Court.
Whether the appellate bench revisits the duty analysis or confirms it will partly determine whether this strand of litigation has a future in Australia.
What the Pabai case exposed, beyond the doctrinal question, was the human weight behind the legal argument. The Torres Strait Islands sit barely above sea level. Storm surges already inundate graveyards. The cultural practice the applicants called Ailan Kastom, connection to sea, land, and ancestors, was argued to constitute a recoverable loss under negligence.
Justice Wigney declined to recognise it as compensable harm. The communities whose existence prompted the case remain as exposed as they were when the proceedings began.
Planning Law as Climate Veto
While federal tort law has stalled, state planning tribunals have moved with more confidence. The clearest precedent remains Gloucester Resources v Minister for Planning, decided by the NSW Land and Environment Court in February 2019. Chief Justice Preston rejected the Rocky Hill coal mine project not primarily on procedural grounds, but on substantive climate ones. An open cut coal mine in that valley, he found, would be in the wrong place at the wrong time. 3
The significance of that framing is still unfolding. Chief Justice Preston found a causal link between the project's emissions and climate change, and crucially refused the argument that a project producing a small fraction of global emissions could not meaningfully contribute to global warming. Every tonne counts.
That reasoning has filtered through the NSW Independent Planning Commission and influenced subsequent coal mine assessments. The Bylong Coal Project was rejected on similar grounds just months later.
State tribunals have produced more durable climate jurisprudence than federal courts partly because planning appeals turn on merits, not legal novelty. A judge assessing whether a mine is in the public interest can weigh emissions directly. The standard does not require inventing a new duty of care. It requires good science and a willingness to use it, both of which Chief Justice Preston demonstrated.
That asymmetry between jurisdictions is a feature, not a bug, for climate litigants. Activist lawyers are choosing their terrain carefully, and state planning law offers ground that federal negligence doctrine does not.
The Greenwashing Reckoning
While duty of care arguments have struggled, a second front has opened with far greater commercial impact. ASIC's campaign against greenwashing in the financial sector produced the most consequential climate-related penalties in Australian legal history across 2024 and 2025.
Mercer Superannuation was ordered to pay $11.3 million after admitting it made misleading statements about the sustainable credentials of its investment options. Vanguard Investments Australia followed, ordered to pay $12.9 million for misrepresenting ESG exclusionary screens applied to a bond fund with more than $1 billion under management. Active Super was penalised a further $10.5 million. 2
What the three cases share is a simple evidentiary problem: each company said it excluded certain industries from its sustainable options, and each invested in them anyway. The gap between published policy and actual portfolio was the violation. Under section 18 of the Australian Consumer Law, a statement does not need to be deliberately false to constitute misleading conduct. It only needs to create a false impression.
Aspirational language, the vague promise of alignment with net zero, is now legally precarious unless it rests on a credible and documented methodology.
The activist litigation front produced a more mixed result. The Australian Centre for Corporate Responsibility's case against Santos over net zero pathway statements was heard in late 2024, with the Federal Court handing down its decision in February 2026. 5
The court found the allegations of misleading conduct were not made out. Santos' forward-looking climate statements, however contested their methodology, were found to have a reasonable basis. The decision is being closely studied by environmental law groups. It does not close the door on greenwashing claims against energy companies, but it narrows it considerably.
A separate first-of-its-kind greenwashing proceeding against a major energy company marketing a consumer product as carbon neutral was settled just before trial commenced, leaving no public precedent on how courts would assess carbon neutrality claims for retail products. Settlements of that kind, reached at the threshold of proceedings, suppress the very jurisprudence that future litigants need.
Directors in the Frame
The passage of mandatory climate disclosure legislation in September 2024 introduced the sharpest shift in corporate exposure. From January 2025, Australia's largest companies are required to prepare annual sustainability reports aligned with the International Sustainability Standards Board framework, filed as part of their statutory annual reports and subject to director sign-off. 4
Directors are legally responsible for the accuracy of those disclosures under the existing liability framework of the Corporations Act.
The legislation includes a modified liability window. For the period from July 2025 to June 2028, only ASIC, not private litigants, can bring action relating to Scope 3 emissions disclosures, scenario analysis, and transition plan statements. 4
The rationale was to give companies time to develop disclosure capability without being immediately exposed to class actions. After that window closes, private litigation becomes available for claims that climate disclosures were materially misleading.
Securities lawyers are already anticipating what that wave might look like. The first sustainability reports from Group 1 entities, covering the 2025 financial year, are due in 2026. Once those documents are in the public domain, plaintiff firms will compare disclosed transition plans against actual emissions trajectories, capital expenditure in fossil fuels, and public statements by executives.
The distance between what a company says about its climate risk and what an investor later experiences as a financial loss is the territory where climate disclosure fraud claims will be built.
The Legislative Gap
Courts filling the space that legislation has not occupied creates its own tensions. The Sharma line of cases prompted debate about whether judges should be setting climate policy by default, when it is Parliament's role to do so. The courts have largely answered that question themselves, by refusing to extend duty of care to government emissions decisions. But in the process, they have handed corporations more clarity about where their exposure actually lies: not in novel tort, but in what they say publicly about their own conduct.
The Albanese government's Safeguard Mechanism reforms, tightening emissions baselines on Australia's largest industrial facilities, were designed partly to give the largest emitters a regulatory framework they could point to in litigation. Compliance with the Safeguard Mechanism is not, however, a defence to a greenwashing claim. A company can meet its regulatory baseline and still have misrepresented its net zero trajectory to investors. Those are separate legal questions.
Practitioners working across both domains note the irony: the legislative framework is most developed exactly where courts have been least willing to go, government emissions policy, and least developed where courts have been most active, corporate disclosure and planning approvals. That inversion shapes the strategy of every climate litigant in the country.
The International Dimension
Australian climate litigation does not develop in isolation. The International Court of Justice handed down its Advisory Opinion on state climate obligations on 23 July 2025, finding that customary international law imposes climate-related obligations on states beyond what treaty commitments specify. 7
The opinion is non-binding, but it gives advocates a body of international reasoning to introduce into domestic arguments, particularly in cases where administrative law review requires consideration of Australia's international obligations.
The 2025 Global Trends in Climate Change Litigation snapshot, produced by the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics, noted that the overall growth rate of climate litigation is stabilising as the field matures and more complex, targeted cases replace broader framework actions. 8
Australia's trajectory fits that pattern: the era of the landmark test case is giving way to sector-specific enforcement, disclosure liability, and strategic planning challenges.
What connects the Australian cases to comparable proceedings in the Netherlands and Germany is the same underlying pressure: legal systems built for a stable climate are being asked to respond to systemic disruption. The difference is that Australia lacks constitutional rights provisions, making courts more cautious about expanding common law duties into policy territory.
That caution has disappointed climate advocates. It has not, however, stopped litigation. It has simply redirected it toward harder, more technical terrain.
What Comes Next
The appeal by the Torres Strait Islander applicants in Pabai is proceeding before the Full Federal Court. If the appellate bench finds differently on the duty question, the implications for Commonwealth climate policy would be immediate and profound. Even a partial reversal, on the adaptation obligations rather than the emissions targets, would open new liability pathways. That remains a significant legal risk on the government's horizon.
Greenwashing enforcement will intensify as the first mandatory sustainability reports land. ASIC has signalled it will not make greenwashing an explicit priority in 2026, but the agency has also been unambiguous that this does not represent a withdrawal from climate-related enforcement. The combination of mandatory disclosure and the existing penalties framework means any significant gap between what a company reports and what it actually does becomes a live legal question.
The courtroom has not solved the climate crisis. It was never going to. But it has done something more specific: it has changed the calculus of risk for boards, fund managers, and infrastructure developers across the country.
In a nation where federal climate legislation has moved fitfully for three decades, that shift in corporate exposure may prove to be the most durable consequence of a long and expensive era of legal contest.
References
1. Human Rights Law Centre. (2025). Federal Court Determines the Commonwealth Owes No Duty of Care to Protect Torres Strait Islanders from Climate Change. HRLC Case Summary.
2. Australian Securities and Investments Commission. (2024). ASIC's Vanguard Greenwashing Action Results in Record $12.9 Million Penalty. ASIC Media Release.
3. Norton Rose Fulbright. (2019). Wrong Place at the Wrong Time: Greenhouse Gas Emissions Contribute to Coal Mine Refusal. Norton Rose Fulbright Insights.
4. DLA Piper. (2024). Key Elements of the New Australian Mandatory Climate-Related Reporting Requirements. DLA Piper Insights.
5. Ashurst. (2026). Climate Litigation in Australia: Key Developments in 2025 and What's Ahead for 2026. Ashurst Insights.
6. Corrs Chambers Westgarth. (2025). Pabai Decision: Federal Court Finds No Duty of Care to Protect Torres Strait Islanders from Climate Change. Corrs Insights.
7. International Court of Justice. (2025). Advisory Opinion on the Obligations of States in Respect of Climate Change. ICJ, July 2025.
8. Setzer, J. and Higham, C. (2025). Global Trends in Climate Change Litigation: 2025 Snapshot. Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, London School of Economics.
9. ASIC. (2024). ASIC's First Greenwashing Case Results in Landmark $11.3 Million Penalty for Mercer. ASIC Media Release.
10. Gilbert + Tobin. (2025). Mandatory Climate-Related Financial Disclosure Has Commenced: What You Need to Know. Gilbert + Tobin Insights.
11. LexisNexis. (2025). Climate Litigation in Australia: Emerging Legal Duties for Lawyers. LexisNexis Insights.
12. Environmental Defenders Office. (2025). Pabai v Commonwealth of Australia. EDO Case Summary.
13. Lexology / Ashurst. (2025). Climate Litigation Is Shaping the Regulatory Landscape in Australia. Lexology.



