Work and Climate Change Report - elizabethperry493
The landmark Urgenda decision
in the Netherlands in June 2015 has ignited and re-ignited activity
around the world, around the prospect of using litigation to fight
climate change. "Unlawful or Above the Law? " in the CCPA Monitor
(Nov/Dec. 2015) reviews the Urgenda decision in detail, and puts it in
the context of Canadian policy and historical legal cases which have
challenged Canada's withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol. A fuller
treatment of the article, titled Canada's Failure to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions
(October 31, 2015) appears on the Lawyers' Rights Watch Canada website.
The authors advocate a legal challenge to Canada's GHG emissions
reduction policies. Much of the legal argument is based on the concept
of environmental rights as human rights; a Canadian pioneer on this
issue is David R. Boyd, whose article " The Constitutional Right to a Healthy Environment" appeared in Environment Magazine in 2012. (a fuller treatment appears in his book The Environmental Rights Revolution: A Global Study of Constitutions, Human Rights and the Environment (2012)). A more recent publication by Ecojustice, The Right to a Healthy Environment: Canada's Time to Act (2015), acknowledges a large debt to Boyd's work, and the BlueDot movement
of the David Suzuki Foundation works in practical ways towards the
goal. In December 2015, Toronto became the 100th municipality in Canada
to pass a declaration supporting its residents' right to a healthy environment. Climate Change: Tackling the Greatest Human Rights Challenge of our Time
(Feb. 2015) by the Center for International Environmental Law and CARE
considers how to address the issue within the UNFCCC process.
Liability
Regarding liability for climate change damages, West Coast
Environmental Law in B.C. and the Vanuatu Environmental Law Association
released Taking Climate Justice into our own Hands
on December 8, 2015 "which explains the legal basis for
climate-impacted countries to set the rules for climate damages lawsuits
and how those rules can be enforced against international fossil fuel
polluters." Further, the authors propose language for a Climate Compensation Act, based on common law and thus adaptable to in any country in the world. (Vanuatu released a Statement for Climate Justice in June 2015 ). A newly-launched blog series by the Alberta Environmental Law Centre promises "to provide updates on climate change law developments and include insights from our related law reform research."
Sabin Center
The Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at the Columbia Law School, New York, publishes compendium of cases in the U.S. and non-U.S., and maintains a database called Climate Change Laws of the World. In 2015, the Center published Climate Change in the Courts: An Assesment of non-U.S. climate litigation, as well as Climate Change and Human Rights 2015 (in
cooperation with UNEP). The introduction states: "The question is no
longer whether human rights law has anything to say about climate
change, but rather what it says and how it can best be brought to bear.
This report is the most detailed and comprehensive study yet undertaken
of those questions".
In a November 2015 blog, "Failure to take climate action is not only morally wrong, it's illegal"
Michael Burger discusses the Urgenda and Ashgar Legari case in
Pakistan, and links them to current climate change cases in the United
States. Most high profile of these have been led by Our Children's
Trust, arguing for the right of children to live in a healthy
environment. In November in Washington State, Judge Hollis Hill ruled
in favour of youth, stating that "[t]he state has a constitutional
obligation to protect the public's interest in natural resources held in
trust for the common benefit of the people." Other cases are being
pursued by Our Children's Trust in Massachusetts, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Colorado. In August 2015, Our Children's Trust filed a landmark constitutional climate change lawsuit against the federal government
in the U.S. District Court of Oregon; plaintiffs include 21 young
people and climate scientist Dr. James E. Hansen, serving as guardian
for his granddaughter and for future generations. The complaint document
is here;
the plaintiffs request a court order requiring the President to
implement a national plan to decrease CO2 to a safe level, defined as
350 ppm by the year 2100. In January 2016, a judge granted intervenor status
in the case to the National Association of Manufacturers, the American
Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers,the American Petroleum
Institute, and other energy industry groups.
Internationally, cases claiming damages from climate changes are underway in the Philippines and Peru. To keep up to date internationally, follow eLaws News by the Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide (ELAW), who have also published Holding Corporations Accountable for Damaging the Climate (2014). The Center for International Environmental Law also focuses on climate liability and climate justice.
No comments:
Post a Comment