4.1 Introduction
This chapter argues that low-profile climate litigation, such as routine administrative law cases, have significant transformative potential and should receive more attention. High-profile climate litigation, such as structural constitutional claims, tort-based cases against the fossil fuel industry, and public international law cases, raise awareness and are highly relevant to advancing legal climate protection. However, around the world, routine climate-relevant claims have had unexpected positive impacts, and we argue that advancing such cases in a coordinated manner could create a “butterfly effect.” In most cases, courts do not hand down spectacular, precedent-breaking decisions or treat climate change like an exceptional legal problem. Instead, they adapt existing legal frameworks to make them workable for climate-related issues. We argue that this normalization or routinization of climate adjudication broadens its reach and impact and is less prone to backlash and vulnerabilities than more spectacular cases, and, as a result, their potential should be further studied and tested.
4.2 Climate Litigation: A Typology
According to the chaos theory metaphor, the minuscule motion of a butterfly’s wings can trigger a tornado half a world away. The term “butterfly effect” stems from Edward Lorenz’s meteorological studies in the 1960s, which found that the details of a tornado, such as its exact time of formation and trajectory, was influenced by minor changes in the climate system several weeks earlier. Lorenz saw the effect when observing runs of his weather model, noticing that a small change in the initial weather conditions created a significantly different outcome.Footnote 1 Analogously, Catharine MacKinnon, in her book Butterfly Politics, argues that seemingly insignificant actions, through collective recursion, can intervene in unstable systems to produce systemic change and that the right, seemingly minor interventions in the legal realm can have a butterfly effect that generates major social and cultural transformations.Footnote 2
In a similar way, we argue that the bottom-up climate change regime created by the Paris AgreementFootnote 3 has a potential to generate “butterfly climate adjudication” by injecting climate relevant reasoning into courts’ routine decisions. Simple adaptations of domestic legal frameworks and cross-application of precedents within and across countries could affect the global atmosphere, one legal case at a time, by triggering aggregate effects.
The growing body of literature analyzing climate change litigation and its effects on climate governance provides insights into its potentials, problems, and limitations, including how interest groups use climate litigation strategically and its effects on regulatory responses and individual and corporate behavior.Footnote 4 But few studies have concentrated on assessing developments in the case law itself, which is explored in this chapter, with a focus on low-profile climate litigation against governments before domestic courts.
Climate cases are diverse. They differ with regard to actors, interests, claims, bodies of law used to support the claims, and the types of court involved. We distinguish five main types: (i) civil law (tort) cases, seeking compensation from fossil-fuel corporations for climate-related damages; (ii) criminal law cases against companies; (iii) administrative law cases, seeking regulation and accountability for climate change mitigation or adaptation; (iv) constitutional law claims brought before domestic courts, and (v) public international law cases, typically demanding protection for communities most vulnerable to climate-related harms.Footnote 5
In civil law cases, plaintiffs use nuisance or negligence doctrines to claim that emitters of greenhouse gases are required to repair harms caused by their emissions. Petitioners direct these claims mainly toward fossil fuel corporations. Petitions include requests for compensation for harms to the environment and court orders for corporations to reduce emissions. Paradigmatic cases include Kivalina v. Exxon et al.,Footnote 6 which focused on the climate-related displacement of the Alaska Native village of Kivalina, and Comer v. Murphy Oil,Footnote 7 brought by landowners in the United States (Mississippi) claiming that oil and coal companies’ emissions contributed to climate change, which in turn caused the sea-level rise that added to the intensity of Hurricane Katrina. Tort cases have been dismissed for posing non-judiciable, political questions and for difficulties linking alleged harms to particular corporations’ emissions. New data tracking methods for the anthropogenic emissions of specific producers could yield different results.Footnote 8 For more on these emission attribution methods, see Richard Heede’s chapter in this volume (Chapter 12). For more on climate litigation against major fossil fuel corporations, see Joana Setzer’s chapter in this volume (Chapter 10).
In criminal and corporate liability law cases, American citizens and state attorneys have filed claims of fraud and conspiracy against fossil fuel companies for creating a false scientific debate about climate change to mislead public opinion and investors.Footnote 9 Just as tobacco companies were accused of hiding documents proving that tobacco is harmful, fossil fuel and energy companies are being accused of conspiring to deny climate change despite having evidence to the contrary.Footnote 10 Charges of securities fraud are used to pressure companies to disclose to investors the risks they face as governments try to limit greenhouse gas emissions. Climate protection through criminal law potentially includes utilizing existing domestic law crimes against the environment; domestic crimes that could be created to protect elements of the climate system; and international criminal law, such as the possible penalization of “ecocide” as suggested by Polly Higgins et al.Footnote 11 or “postericide” as suggested by Catriona McKinnon.Footnote 12
In administrative law cases, plaintiffs claim that governments are obliged to take – or not take – actions to mitigate or adapt to climate change according to domestic and/or international commitments. In Section 4.3, we zoom in on these cases, based on our previous studyFootnote 13 and expand it to include constitutional law claims being brought in various countries, where citizens seek to hold their governments accountable for constitutional rights violations stemming from inadequate climate regulations in areas such as forest conservation and the licensing of carbon-intensive projects.Footnote 14
The last category is public international law cases. Petitions are filed before international courts and treaty bodies regarding the adverse effects of climate change on, for example, Indigenous peoples; communities with limited adaptation capacity, like the inhabitants of small island states or those who are especially vulnerable to the effects of climate change due to poverty or geographical location; and sites considered part of the world’s heritage. The dominant argument is that governments and corporations most responsible for global emissions have an obligation to shift to more sustainable practices and to assist communities in other countries suffering climate-related harms of no fault of their own, particularly those lacking the means to adapt. So far, no international court or treaty body has ruled in favor of communities claiming special vulnerability to climate change.
Climate litigation thus incorporates diverse and innovative ways of building legal arguments to protect the global climate system. “Bold” climate change decisions, creating extraordinary new precedent and establishing groundbreaking statutory or constitutional case law, are of great importance but often are difficult and risky for individual judges to make and for tribunals to agree upon – and are more likely to be overturned by higher courts.Footnote 15 The more novel the judicial interpretation or case law, the greater the risk of legislative backlash. Implementation of rulings is also more difficult when the gap between the decision and the status quo is large.Footnote 16 These risks are particularly high when dealing with complex and politicized climate policy issues and are a reason why climate litigation should not only aim for exceptional rulings. Notwithstanding the importance of climate cases based in private law, criminal law, constitutional law, and international law, we nonetheless zoom in on administrative law claims as a strategy to build legal capacity to protect the climate system. These discrete and rather unspectacular cases get less media and scholarly attention but have achieved more favorable rulings. In Section 4.3, we explore the potential of existing case law to trigger a “butterfly effect” in climate adjudication. Section 4.4 discusses possible ways of unfolding that potential, as well as some vulnerabilities.
4.3 Administrative Litigation in Search of a Butterfly Effect
Scholars have argued that climate change cases often fail because they are solved as ordinary environmental cases with no distinctive climate jurisprudence developed to address the unique characteristics of climate change.Footnote 17 In our former study, we found this critique to be valid with regard to tort law cases against the fossil fuel industry, while cases against governments display limited, but meaningful, jurisprudential developments that serve to unblock climate governance and improve consideration of climate impacts in project planning and public financing decisions.Footnote 18 Hence, the importance of climate adjudication does not (only) depend on the development of distinctive climate jurisprudence.
When exploring climate cases within the administrative and constitutional law categories, we have found that most cases against governments have been decided in favor of climate protection. This does not necessarily mean that extractive projects are halted or that global emissions of greenhouse gases decrease, but it indicates a significant role for adjudication in bringing climate concerns to bear on planning and risk assessment procedures.Footnote 19
Existing case law is concentrated in the United States and Australia, followed by New Zealand and the United Kingdom. Most cases challenge licenses granted by local planning authorities for extractive and carbon-intensive projects, like coal mines and coal power plants that are central to the economy of these countries. Licenses are challenged for not sufficiently considering global atmospheric harms in environmental impact assessments (EIAs). There has also been successful climate litigation challenging extractive projects in Global South countries like Colombia and South Africa.Footnote 20 Although petroleum is at the core of the climate change problem, few cases have challenged governments over oil extraction permits or related harms and all have been decided against the plaintiffs.Footnote 21 Cases challenging permits for renewable energy projects – often citing other negative environmental impacts, like noise, damage to landscapes, or harms to birds and other wildlife – present mixed outcomes from a climate perspective. Litigation aiming to unblock the administrative inertia impeding the implementation of climate policies has succeeded in India and Pakistan and in Europe in the famous Urgenda case, which cited international law and human rights law in a tort-based claim to force the Dutch government to create stronger mitigation targets – triggering a wave of human rights–based mitigation claims.Footnote 22
Administrative climate litigation impacts climate governance in the United States and Australia through the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and land use planning litigation, respectively.Footnote 23 The first administrative case in Australia was brought to court in 1994 by Greenpeace.Footnote 24 Still using the language of “global warming,” it challenged a state council decision to grant development consent to a coal power station, claiming it would harm the global atmosphere and impact the climate system. Greenpeace alleged that the energy to be produced by the plant was not needed for domestic consumption, and thus its atmospheric harms were not justifiable. The case was dismissed. The alleged harms were considered speculative, and economic development and jobs were the priority.
Two decades later, NGOs in Austria and the United Kingdom challenged permits granted for the expansion of the Vienna and Stansted (London) airports based on their projected contributions to greenhouse gas emissions.Footnote 25 These cases were also dismissed. Despite acknowledging international emissions reduction commitments, economic growth and jobs were prioritized. In contrast, in February 2020, a similar case concerning the expansion of London’s Heathrow AirportFootnote 26 was decided in favor of the petitioners, by the UK Court of Appeal, based on the United Kingdom’s pledges pursuant to the Paris Agreement. The ruling was, however, overturned by the Supreme Court on December 16, 2020, on the grounds, among others, that the formal ratification of the Paris Agreement did not mean that it (yet) constituted “government policy.”Footnote 27 Plan B Earth announced that it will appeal the judgment to the European Court of Human Rights.Footnote 28
When asked to align environmental and economic considerations in decisions concerning extraction and development projects, the jurisprudence tends to favor economic considerations without rigorous examination of the principles of sustainable development, norms that are part of the global regulatory regime on climate change, or relevant soft law such as the Oslo Principles on Global Climate Change (2015).Footnote 29 The jurisprudence on sustainable development and the application of the precautionary principle still need more elaboration in order to effectively influence decision-making in the administrative state.
The potential of routine climate cases could be enhanced through the inclusion in more countries of climate arguments in relevant administrative litigation, such as project licensing, and by exploiting synergies with more traditional environmental litigation, such as that on local air pollution. Routine administrative law cases are important to triggering a butterfly effect on climate change. They do not rely only on visionary and brave judges and, importantly, can integrate climate change concerns into the everyday fabric of the law and ordinary legal education.
A key challenge has been the portrayal of climate change as an abstract and intangible problem, located in distant lands and the far future. This is changing, though, as the scientific and legal capacity to understand and attribute responsibility have developed. In many administrative court cases, climate change is now discussed as a matter of the here and now, with precise claims regarding what the government should do – including how projects’ estimated greenhouse gas emissions should be counted and considered in the impact assessments that inform licensing.
The overall aim of court cases filed against governments is to make governments’ international declarations and domestic constitutional and legal commitments matter in everyday climate-relevant administrative decisions – including land use, development policy, urban planning, and incentives for the energy sector (renewable and non-renewable). Table 4.1 distinguishes some currents or themes key to the climate change debate within administrative law cases, which build traction and legal capacity for climate protection within the administrative state by transforming climate change from abstract and complex discourse to issues suitable for adjudication. Some cases reflecting each current are also listed. Some are high-profile cases, while others are routine cases that could set off a butterfly effect.
Administrative law climate litigation currents | Cases |
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Role of states in protecting forests and carbon capture ecosystems |
|
Decarbonizing transport |
|
Adequacy of national emission reduction targets |
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Fairness of market incentives for the renewable energy industry |
|
Licensing of renewable energy projects |
|
Licensing of new fossil fuel extraction projects |
|
Protection of water resources for climate resilience |
|
Publicity of information on fossil fuel investment |
|
States’ role in providing climate-related refugee protection |
Climate-related litigation often involves administrative due process claims. At their core, these court cases discuss the duty of governments to take precautionary measures to avoid the excessive accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere and to protect citizens from the negative impacts of those already accumulated.
We suggest that by accommodating existing legal norms and doctrine to make them workable for climate change, some courts have managed to create important precedents from which an “unspectacular” but distinct climate jurisprudence is evolving. The courts seem receptive to the argument that discrete, local, bottom-up solutions are important, so taking incremental steps is appropriate.Footnote 30 That the jurisprudence is diverse, uneven, and produced in different legal systems is no reason to overlook its contributions to tackling the collective action problem that is climate change.
By settling the debate on the validity of climate science in public decision-making, courts have managed to establish climate change as a collective action problem that requires regulatory interventions. A number of courts have contributed important precedents to the evolving climate jurisprudence that could be used by other courts confronted with similar cases and inserted into routine administrative adjudication. Some of these precedents are presented in Table 4.2.
Precedent | Court and Case |
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Greenhouse gases are air pollutants and thus subject to state regulation |
|
Climate change risks are a mandatory consideration in EIAs of new carbon-intensive projects |
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Climate adaptation should be a consideration in planning for new development projects |
|
There is a governmental duty of care for climate change in relation to human rights |
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There is a governmental obligation to mitigate climate change (halt deforestation) in order to protect human rights and the rights of nature |
|
State incentives for renewable energy projects are a legitimate policy objective |
In some high-profile cases, judges also go for traditional legal doctrines rather than new or precedent-breaking ones. Although Massachusetts v. EPA and Urgenda v. the Netherlands are “spectacular” cases, they were decided in favor of climate protection with a modest adaptation of existing legal notions. In Massachusetts v. EPA, the notion of “air pollutant” in US law was extended to encompass global atmospheric pollution. In Urgenda, the “duty of care” was extended to include governmental responsibility for adequate climate mitigation policy. Future Generations v. Colombia used existing human rights duties to adjudicate governmental responsibility for adequate mitigation policy. It became “spectacular jurisprudence” with the unsolicited declaration of the legal personhood of the Colombian Amazon. Yet the rights of nature had already been recognized in Colombia and elsewhere.
In sum, we suggest that the most radical contribution of courts to climate governance has been making policy challenges tangible and routine in nature. If cited and used across countries, unspectacular precedents have the potential to infuse broad areas of law and intervene in unstable climate governance systems in ways that – hopefully – positively affect the global atmosphere. Litigants should aim for butterfly judgments, seeking to incrementally improve the global climate system. But as with the butterfly effect for meteorological predictions, it will be impossible for future analysts to trace atmospheric changes to any particular court case.
Although the developments discussed here are important, climate jurisprudence still has a long way to go, not least with respect to the design of remedies and implementation-monitoring mechanisms and the expansion of arguments regarding sustainable development and the precautionary principle.
4.4 Concluding Reflections: Potential, Vulnerabilities, and Ways Forward
Since the early 1990s, when the first climate claims were brought to court, jurisprudence has developed, ranging from the rejection of climate claims for being too speculative to the use of reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) as solid legal proof.Footnote 31 This jurisprudence has nudged governments into making better-informed decisions on a variety of issues, including fuel efficiency standards, greenhouse gas emissions from coal power plants, the licensing of new extractive projects, airport expansions, housing projects along coastlines affected by sea level rise, the use of water sources for industrial processes when climate resilience is at stake, and market incentives for renewable energy projects.
By settling the debate on climate science and confirming that all mitigation contributions matter, courts have managed to bring climate change to the here and now. Courts have established climate change as a collective action problem that requires regulatory interventions and have managed to adapt existing legal frameworks to accommodate and mainstream climate change into routine decision-making processes. By doing so, they are creating legal capacityFootnote 32 within the administrative state to deal with climate risks and disproving arguments that climate change is too abstract and speculative for courts to handle.Footnote 33
In this chapter, we have shown that important climate protection precedents have been created by courts around the world, thereby helping the administrative state to untie some knots related to the super wicked nature of climate change.Footnote 34 Judiciaries are finding ways to establish, case by case, the type of legal problem climate change is: a human rights problem, a global atmospheric pollution problem, a problem concerning the adequate assessment of the impacts of carbon-intensive projects, a sustainable development problem, a biodiversity protection problem, a problem of justice for future generations and other species, and a problem of market incentives for renewables.
However, experimentalist, deliberative, and dialogical modes of adjudication are still uncommon in climate jurisprudence,Footnote 35 and remedies and monitoring mechanisms are only exceptionally included or explained in climate court rulings. A normativist approach dominates, focusing on rights declarations. There are still few signs of democratic experimentalism and the participatory implementation of solutions that could foster more cooperative relationships among branches of power, which is needed to address the complexities of the climate problem.Footnote 36
International treaties are important in unclogging climate action and understanding the domestic legal currents into which they can be channeled permits the development of long-lasting legal responses.Footnote 37 Courts’ routinization of climate-relevant claims expands the existing legal frameworks that judges are most comfortable using. Thus, courts have created space within existing laws to mainstream climate change into adjudicative practice.Footnote 38 This is a desirable outcome. The more climate litigation permeates everyday law, the more traction it has in the legal system. Exploring ways of scaling up and coordinating cases to reach a butterfly effect in climate litigation across jurisdictions should thus be part of a research agenda for climate protection advocates and researchers.