Climate activists, companies lawyer up for courtroom battles
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[November 22, 2023]
By Gloria Dickie
DUBAI (Reuters) - As global temperatures and emissions climb, people are
increasingly turning to courtrooms to challenge fossil fuel companies'
activities, leading to wins on issues like "climate-washing" but also
backlash as companies file countersuits.
In the last five years, the number of climate-related court cases that
have been filed around the world more than doubled, according to a 2023
report by the U.N. Environment Program (UNEP) and New York's Columbia
University, from 884 filed by 2017 to nearly 2,500 as of today.
A lawsuit "holds companies to account in a way that just protests or
campaigns cannot do," said Joana Setzer, a climate litigation researcher
at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).
Analysts say the strategy appears to be working, with more than half of
cases with judicial outcomes leaning toward stronger climate action,
according to a 2023 report from LSE.
"We have seen more ambition and more action from governments thanks to
litigation," Setzer said.
Here are some key trends in climate litigation:
WHERE CASES ARE BEING FILED
Most of today's climate lawsuits have been filed in the United States,
including 20 filed by U.S. cities or states against major fossil fuel
companies that are likely to go to trial.
Some U.S. cases, however, feature right-wing states challenging federal
rules for requiring companies to disclose their environmental impacts.
About 17% of cases since 2017 have been filed in developing countries,
while European courts are hearing several cases that experts say could
set new legal precedents.
'CLIMATE-WASHING' IN FOCUS
Companies of all kinds are being challenged over alleged
"climate-washing," or misleading plans and statements related to
tackling emissions.
Delta Air Lines (DAL.N) is facing a proposed class action lawsuit over
allegedly violating California consumer protection laws by advertising
itself as carbon-neutral.
"Climate litigation has really widened from large fossil fuel companies
to this aspect of accountability and transparency," Setzer said. "If you
are able to make statements about 'net zero' or 'carbon neutral', then
really these should be proven."
In 2021 and 2022, more than 50 climate-washing cases were filed globally
against companies, up sharply from just 15 in the previous two years,
the LSE report found.
COMPANIES STRIKE BACK
Companies are not only on the defense. They are also filing their own
cases against governments with the aim to delay or dismantle regulations
on climate action, the UNEP report said.
These so-called backlash cases include one filed by 26 Republican-led
states, an oil drilling company and an oil and gas trade group,
challenging a Biden administration rule allowing employee retirement
plans to consider environmental, social or governance issues in their
investment decisions.
Not all challenges succeed, though. After a judge in September upheld
the rule, the plaintiff's coalition said in October it would appeal.
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A man holds a sign as activists mark the start of Climate Week in
New York during a demonstration calling for the U.S. government to
take action on climate change and reject the use of fossil fuels in
New York City, New York, U.S., September 17, 2023. REUTERS/Eduardo
Munoz/ File photo
In Europe, a court denied energy companies RWE and Uniper
compensation for lost revenues from the Dutch government, after the
Netherlands decided to close coal-fired energy plants by 2030.
Oil majors also have targeted climate protesters following a
government crackdown on direct action in Europe, while Britain has
made it illegal to lock or glue oneself to property as a protest
stunt.
This month, Shell filed a suit against Greenpeace seeking $2.1
million in damages after protesters in January boarded the company's
oil production vessel near the Canary Islands.
OTHER CASES TO WATCH
DUARTE AGOSTINHO AND OTHERS V. PORTUGAL AND 32 OTHER STATES
Six Portuguese youth are suing 33 European countries for allegedly
failing to avert catastrophic climate change that they say now
threatens their right to life.
The case — among the first to be heard at the European Court of
Human Rights — does not ask for financial compensation, but for
governments to cut emissions more drastically. The case was heard in
Strasbourg in September 2023. A ruling is expected in the first half
of 2024.
LUCIANO LLIUYA V. RWE AG
Peruvian farmer Saul Luciano Lliuya is suing German energy utility
RWE for about $20,000. He says the company's emissions have
contributed to the melting of Andean glaciers, swelling a lake above
his hometown to dangerous levels.
"It's a nominal amount, but a significant precedent," said Joe Snape,
an associate at law firm Leigh Day.
The argument rests on attribution science — can the plaintiff prove
the company's emissions are responsible for worsening climate
change, and to what extent?
Following a May 2022 expedition to Peru to gather evidence, the case
will be heard early next year in Hamm, Germany.
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA V. BIG OIL
In September, the U.S. state of California launched a lawsuit
against oil companies Exxon Mobil, Shell, ConocoPhillips, BP and
Chevron.
The suit accuses the companies of deceiving the public by
downplaying fossil fuel risks and argues they are responsible for
tens of billions of dollars in climate-related damage.
The lawsuit is seeking a compensation fund to pay for future
climate-related damages in the state.
Ambitious in scope, the case is "an amalgamation of strategies,"
Setzer said. "It's not just a compensation case, but also a
deception case, which makes it stronger."
(Reporting by Gloria Dickie in London; Editing by Katy Daigle and
Josie Kao)
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