Kristin Casper and Richard Harvey are climate justice lawyers with Greenpeace International. |
Attendees of the Peoples’ Summit on Climate, Rights and Human Survival at New York University © Tracie Williams / Greenpeace |
Courts and the law have become essential for those of us trying to find solutions to the climate emergency. International legal experts are joining this struggle to help the millions who are doing their best, day in and day out, to address the climate crisis before it gets even worse.
How courts can hold governments to account
More than 600 legal cases have been filed by individuals and NGOs to assert the fundamental rights of communities suffering from the climate crisis. That number is rapidly increasing. No single legal victory will solve the climate emergency, but each case contributes to getting us there faster.
For example, a Dutch environmental group called the Urgenda Foundation, together with 886 citizens sued the state of The Netherlands over its insufficient actions to prevent dangerous climate change. The Dutch Supreme Court issued a groundbreaking decision in December 2019, demonstrating how the judiciary can play a significant role in holding a national government to account for its lack of climate action. Climate change is a human rights crisis and it’s important that our legal systems respond effectively.
Celebrating after Urgenda’s decision ©Urgenda / Chantal Bekker |
In Norway, young people and civil society are asserting their constitutional rights to a stable climate. The Court of Appeals upheld that right, but decided the national government – by granting more oil drilling permits in the Arctic – was not violating that right. That case is now heading to Norway’s Supreme Court.
Worldwide, more than 400 human rights, development and environmental groups have pledged to, “demand effective and adequate access to justice for individuals and communities whose rights are impacted by the climate crisis or lack of climate action” according to the Declaration of the Peoples’ Summit on Climate, Rights and Human Survival.
This declaration represents a growing consensus among human rights, development, labor, and environmental groups, holding governments and corporations to account for the consequences of the actions that contribute to the climate crisis.
The Swiss association “senior women for climate protection” (KlimaSeniorinnen) © Greenpeace / Piero Good |
So what can you and I do?
We believe that judges around the world need help in deciding what evidence is reliable in climate cases, how to assess risk, understanding key international law rules and enforcing the legal rights of individuals or organisations to challenge their governments.
The IBA Model helps lawyers and judges deliver justice to those most impacted by climate change and support their demands to a dignified life. That means that you too can use the law to help your community to hold governments and corporations to account for the climate crisis.
Greenpeace Southeast Asia has published a guide for people like you and me to hold our governments accountable for the climate catastrophe. Let’s join the students striking for our future, the workers demanding a just transition out of toxic industries, the Indigenous Peoples defending their lands, and take climate change to court.
Links
- (AU) Can Legal Action Force Governments And Businesses To Respond To Climate Change?
- Climate Change Litigation Update
- (AU) Bushfire Survivors Join Claim Against ANZ For Financing Climate Crisis
- (AU) Could A Lawsuit Tip The Scales On Climate Policy?
- Landmark Ruling That Holland Must Cut Emissions To Protect Citizens From Climate Change Upheld By Supreme Court
- (UK) A Legal Approach To Fighting Climate Change
- Young Canadians Sue Government For Failing To Act On Climate Change
- Company Directors May Be Headed For Litigation Over Climate Change
- ASIC Issues Updated Guidance For Directors Seeking To Avoid Climate Lawsuits
- Oil industry giants like BP will push the planet’s climate way past 1.5ÂșC of global heating
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