2018
The website ‘climatecasechart.com‘ by ‘Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School‘ provides databases of climate change caselaw worldwide. The None-U.S. Cases in the database are organized by country (Jurisdiction or Principal Law) and type of climate change claim. The United States has a separate database providing around three quarters of all 1,113 cases in the databases (which makes sense since the United States is responsible for 33.1% of the ‘Global Climate Debt‘, while populated only by 4.4%). Read the article ‘Venue of last resort: the climate lawsuits threatening the future of big oil‘ (The Guardian, 2017).
Among Non-U.S. Climate Change Litigation around 92% are Suits Against Governments (the rest are Suits Against Corporations and Individuals), and among U.S. Climate Change Litigation around 54% are Federal Claims (the rest are Constitutional Claims, State Law Claims, Common Law Claims, Public Trust Claims, Securities and Financial Regulation, Trade Agreements, Adaptation, Climate Change Protesters and Scientists). Read the article ‘Can climate litigation save the world‘ (The Guardian, 2018).
As examples, see these two landmark cases from the databases: 1) ‘Urgenda Foundation v. Kingdom of the Netherlands‘ (read more at ‘urgenda.nl‘ and ‘ourchildrenstrust.org/the-netherlands‘, and 2) ‘Juliana v. United States‘. (read more at ‘ourchildrenstrust.org‘).
If lawsuits, courts and judges around the world fail to bring down greenhouse gas emissions, then today’s and tomorrow’s children are facing a hazardous future, the world’s incompetent leaders taken into account.
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