08/03/2018

US Government Can Be Sued By Children Over Climate Change: Court

Fairfax - Jonathan Stempel (Reuters)

New York: A US federal appeals court has rejected the American government's bid to halt a lawsuit by young people claiming that President Donald Trump and his administration are violating their constitutional rights by ignoring the harms caused by climate change.
Students at a climate rally in San Francisco last week. Photo: AP
By a 3-0 vote, the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said the administration had not met the "high bar" under federal law to dismiss the Oregon lawsuit, which was originally brought in 2015 against the administration of Barack Obama.
The lawsuit started during the Obama administration. Photo: AP
The potentially far-reaching case is one of a handful seeking to have courts address global warming and its causes.
Twenty-one plaintiffs, now aged 10 to 21, accused federal officials and oil industry executives of knowing for decades that carbon dioxide emissions from the burning of fossil fuels destabilise the climate, but refusing to do anything about it.
They said this has deprived them of their due process rights to life, liberty and property, including to live in a habitable climate.
Students at a rally for clean energy in San Francisco last week. California opposes a Trump administration plan to scrap a policy slashing climate-changing emissions from power plants. Photo: AP
US District Judge Ann Aiken in Eugene, Oregon in November 2016 refused to dismiss the lawsuit, saying a quick dismissal without addressing the merits could sanction the government's alleged "knowing decision to poison the air."
In seeking to overturn that ruling, the government said letting the case proceed could lead to burdensome litigation, and provoke a "constitutional crisis" by pitting courts against Trump and the many other Executive Branch officials named as defendants.
A South Korean environmental activist protests against the US withdrawal from the Paris climate accord last year. Photo: AP
But in Wednesday's decision, Chief Judge Sidney Thomas said the dismissal request was premature, and deciding whether the plaintiffs' claims were too broad could be addressed through the normal legal process.
"Litigation burdens are part of our legal system, and the defendants still have the usual remedies before the district court for non-meritorious litigation," Thomas wrote. "Claims and remedies often are vastly narrowed as litigation proceeds; we have no reason to assume this case will be any different."
The US Department of Justice, which handled the government appeal, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Julia Olson, who represented the plaintiffs and is executive director of Our Children's Trust, which advocates for improving the climate, in an interview welcomed the decision.
"It's very exciting," she said. "It will be the first time that climate science and the federal government's role in creating its dangers will go on trial in a US court."
The lawsuit was returned to Aiken for further proceedings.

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