10.1 Introduction
Climate change litigation is surging in the face of scientific consensus that Earth’s warming over the past century is dramatically interfering with human and natural systems.Footnote 1 Given the complexity of the problem, climate change plaintiffs often bring creative claims using ‘unconventional’ legal tools outside the realm of environmental statutes.Footnote 2 One such tool is the public trust doctrine, an ancient doctrine rooted in the writings of Justinian that exemplifies the democratic principle of anti-monopolisation over public resources.Footnote 3 The public trust doctrine recognises that sovereigns have an inherent duty as an incident of their sovereignty to act as a trustee over public resources.Footnote 4 Although the doctrine was traditionally invoked to protect navigable waters for public useFootnote 5 – particularly in England and the United StatesFootnote 6 – courts across the globe have expanded the doctrine’s scope in numerous contexts.Footnote 7 This ancient doctrine’s continuing relevance to natural resources law demonstrates its adaptable nature.Footnote 8
Plaintiffs bringing atmospheric trustFootnote 9 claims often face issues of justiciability that do not normally arise when courts apply the public trust doctrine to long-recognised, ‘traditional’ public trust resources – navigable waterways.Footnote 10 Nonetheless, understanding the impending threats posed by climate change, several courts have concluded that the atmosphere is within the doctrine’s scope.Footnote 11 Numerous other courts have at least recognised the public’s strong interest in a properly functioning climate system.Footnote 12 This chapter identifies and explores two analytical frameworks evident in international atmospheric trust jurisprudence as emerging best practices: constitutional recognition tied to intergenerational equity and inter-resource affectation.Footnote 13 International jurists can and should continue to employ these frameworks when they evaluate atmospheric trust claims.
This chapter will show that the public trust doctrine protects the atmosphere whenever constitutional language establishes public rights in or the sovereign’s responsibility for air and climate, a healthy environment, or natural resources generally. Many courts have rooted their support for an atmospheric trust in constitutional language, even absent an explicit reference to air or climate, where the relevant constitution establishes common rights in a healthy environment or natural resources.Footnote 14 Judicial embrace is strongest when the relevant constitutional provision also speaks to principles of intergenerational equity.Footnote 15 Thus, courts appear to be sensitive to the long-term challenges inherent in natural resource management and recognise that the sovereign is in the best position to ensure the continued viability of those resources by exercising its trust duties.
This chapter also illustrates that the atmosphere is subject to the public trust doctrine whenever plaintiffs allege, with supporting scientific evidence, that climate change has impaired their use of traditional public trust resources.Footnote 16 Although courts have not always held that the atmosphere itself is a public trust resource, several courts have concluded that threats to non-traditional public trust resources are intricately tied to traditional public trust resources.Footnote 17 In at least one court’s view, the connection between the atmosphere and navigable waters is sufficient to bring the atmosphere within the public trust doctrine’s scope as a matter of inter-resource affectation.Footnote 18 Likewise, some courts have expanded the public trust doctrine to include groundwater as a trust resource – relying on the scientific consensus that ground and surface waters are interconnected – to hold that when groundwater use affects surface waters, the groundwater must be managed consistent with the public trust.Footnote 19 This basic reasoning applies with equal force to the atmosphere, the degradation of which has scientifically demonstrable effects on navigable surface waters.Footnote 20
The chapter proceeds as follows. Section 10.1 provides additional context and background on the public trust doctrine. Subsequent sections explore the doctrine’s application to the atmosphere. Section 10.2 discusses developments in atmospheric trust case law; Section 10.3 presents the emerging best practices associated with applying the public trust doctrine to the atmosphere in the context of climate change litigation; and Section 10.4 provides guidance on key issues of replicability. The chapter concludes that the public trust doctrine, when analysed by courts under either of the frameworks discussed, gives rise to an atmospheric trust that the sovereign must manage in the public interest and safeguard against substantial impairment.Footnote 21
10.1.1 The Nature of the Public Trust Doctrine
‘The public trust [doctrine] is a dual concept of sovereign right and responsibility.’Footnote 22 As courts see it, ‘public trust claims are unique because they concern inherent attributes of sovereignty’Footnote 23 and do not depend on regulations, statutes, or even constitutions for their force.Footnote 24 One court in the United States explained that ‘in its broadest sense, the term ‘public trust’ refers to the fundamental understanding that no government can legitimately abdicate its core sovereign powers’.Footnote 25 Indeed, ‘the public trust imposes on the government an obligation to protect the res of the trust’, and ‘a defining feature of that obligation is that it cannot be legislated away’.Footnote 26 In other words, with respect to ‘essential natural resources’, ‘the sovereign’s public trust obligations prevent it from depriving a future legislature of the natural resources necessary to provide for the well-being and survival of its citizens’.Footnote 27 Since it is both a sovereign right and responsibility, the public trust doctrine empowers the sovereign to hold essential natural resources in trust for the public and also requires the sovereign to ensure those resources remain available for public use and enjoyment.
10.1.2 Basic Trust Principles
‘A trust is a type of ownership in which one party manages property for the benefit of another party’.Footnote 28 The premise of the trust relationship, therefore, is that ‘the trustee is under a fiduciary obligation to manage the assets for the sole benefit of the beneficiaries’.Footnote 29 These basic principles apply in private and sovereign contexts; ‘in the case of the public trust, the beneficiaries are the citizens’.Footnote 30 The implication is that if a public asset – such as the atmosphere – does indeed fall within the res of a public natural resources trust, the sovereign trustee must manage that public asset for the sole benefit of the citizen beneficiaries.
As noted by a US court, ‘the natural resources trust operates according to basic trust principles, which impose upon the trustee a fiduciary duty to ‘protect the trust property against damage or destruction’.Footnote 31 Because ‘the trustee owes this duty equally to both current and future beneficiaries of the trust’,Footnote 32 the natural resources trust is necessarily intergenerational. Moreover, once ‘the existence of a fiduciary duty on the part of the State to protect a public resource’ has been established, ‘the duty would not seem to depend on the source of the threatened harm’.Footnote 33 In other words, the sovereign owes a public trust duty regardless of whether the sovereign is involved in bringing about harm or a threat of harm to the public trust res.
The public trust doctrine imposes three categories of restrictions on the sovereign’s authority to administer the natural resources trust.Footnote 34 First, trust property must ‘be used for a public purpose’ and must also ‘be held available for use by the general public’.Footnote 35 Second, trust property may never be sold.Footnote 36 Third, trust property ‘must be maintained for particular types of uses’.Footnote 37 Although ‘the “traditional” public trust litigation model … centers on the second restriction, the prohibition against alienation of a public trust asset’, a wave of modern public trust litigation asserts that ‘state and national governments have abdicated their responsibilities under the public trust doctrine’.Footnote 38 Under this modern approach: ‘plaintiffs assert that [sovereigns] have violated their duties as trustees by nominally retaining control over trust assets while actually allowing their depletion and destruction, effectively violating the first and third restrictions by excluding the public from use and enjoyment of public resources.’Footnote 39 In addition to applying the public trust doctrine to new resources, modern public trust litigation emphasises the public rights that sovereigns have a fiduciary obligation to protect.Footnote 40
10.1.3 Historical Scope of the Doctrine
The public trust doctrine is rooted in ancient Roman legal principles that described certain natural elements – particularly bodies of water – as belonging to the public as a whole. These principles were incorporated into several modern legal systems, including several European countries and England, but nowhere so prominently as in the United States, where it became a cornerstone of public rights in waterways and is evolving to protect public rights in other natural resources.
In the United States, the public trust doctrine has traditionally protected ‘coastlines, harbors, and major rivers and lakes’,Footnote 41 or, simply put, navigable waterways. According to Professor Charles Wilkinson, ‘whether valued in terms of economics, recreation, beauty, or spirituality’, these resources are ‘among our most valuable’.Footnote 42 In Illinois Central Railroad Co v Illinois, the seminal public trust doctrine case, the US Supreme Court held that Illinois, like all sovereigns, holds title to lands beneath its navigable waters ‘in trust for the people of the state’, so that ‘they may enjoy the navigation of the waters, carry on commerce over them, and have liberty of fishing therein freed from the obstruction or interference of private parties’.Footnote 43 Thus, since its original invocations, the scope of the US public trust doctrine has been closely associated with navigable waters and the values they provide as public resources.
Outside of the US, judicial pronouncement of the public trust doctrine occurred later,Footnote 44 but has been far less tethered to navigable waterways.Footnote 45 For example, in M C Mehta v Kamal Nath, the Supreme Court of India explained that ‘the public trust doctrine primarily rests on the principle that certain resources like air, sea, waters and the forests have such a great importance to the people as a whole that it would be wholly unjustified to make them a subject of private ownership’.Footnote 46
Interestingly, the court cited the ‘ecological’ reasoning employed in both state and federal cases from the United States to conclude that there is ‘no reason why the public trust doctrine should not be expanded to include all eco-systems operating in our natural resources’.Footnote 47 Although courts in the United States have accepted such ecologically based arguments to extend the public trust res primarily in the context of waters,Footnote 48 international courts have shown a greater willingness to apply this reasoning to other natural resources, including whole ecosystems.Footnote 49
10.1.4 The Rise of an Atmospheric Trust
The rise of atmospheric trust litigation has, in part, been the product of an increased understanding within the international judiciary of the threats posed by climate change and the courts’ role in addressing those threats. For example, the Lahore High Court of Pakistan has recognised that ‘climate change is a defining challenge of our time and has led to dramatic alterations in our planet’s climate system’.Footnote 50 In Pakistan, ‘these climatic variations have primarily resulted in heavy floods and droughts, raising serious concerns regarding water and food security’.Footnote 51 Similarly, as one Washington lower court summarised:
Washington and the Pacific Northwest have experienced long-term warming, a lengthening of the frost-free season, and more frequent nighttime heat waves. Sea level is rising on most of Washington’s coast. Coastal ocean acidity has increased. Glacial area and spring snowpack have declined, and peak stream flows in many rivers have shifted earlier. In addition, climate extremes (floods, droughts, fires, and landslides) are already costly to Washington’s [sic] State.Footnote 52
10.2 Case Law Development
This section explores the developments in natural resource public trust case law. Section 10.2.1 describes the interpretive process and the judicial role in evaluating natural resource public trust claims. Section 10.2.2 discusses the constitutional recognition framework, under which many courts have rooted their support for an atmospheric trust in constitutional language establishing public rights in or the sovereign’s responsibility for air, climate, a healthy environment, or natural resources generally. Finally, Section 10.2.3 introduces what this chapter terms the inter-resource affectation framework, which has been used by courts to bring non-traditional public trust resources under the public trust doctrine’s protection.
10.2.1 Judicial Interpretation of the Public Trust Doctrine
Courts and scholars have recognised that ‘in natural resources cases, the trust property consists of a set of resources important enough to the people to warrant public trust protection’.Footnote 53 Nonetheless, perhaps the greatest challenge for courts reviewing claims brought under the public trust doctrine is determining when – that is, to which resources – the doctrine applies. According to the Supreme Court of Hawai‘i, ‘the public trust, by its very nature, does not remain fixed for all time, but must conform to changing needs and circumstances’.Footnote 54 Professor Joseph Sax, the father of the modern public trust doctrine, explained, ‘certainly the principle of the public trust is broader than its traditional application indicates’.Footnote 55 As new threats to natural resources arise and the public responds by invoking their rights to the continued use and enjoyment of those resources, the public trust doctrine is sure to evolve.
The judiciary’s role in this evolution is straightforward. As the Arizona Court of Appeals declared in Butler v Brewer, ‘it is up to the judiciary to determine the scope of the doctrine’.Footnote 56 In Butler, which concerned an atmospheric trust claim, the Arizona court reasoned that when ‘precedent does not address the measures by which a resource may be determined to be a part of the public trust or a framework for analyzing such contentions’, it is appropriate for the court to ‘assume without deciding that the atmosphere is a part of the public trust subject to the doctrine’.Footnote 57 Consequently, ‘the fact that the only Arizona cases directly addressing the doctrine did so in the context of lands underlying navigable watercourses does not mean that the doctrine in Arizona is limited to such lands’.Footnote 58 Instead, ‘any determination of the scope of the doctrine depends on the facts presented in a specific case’.Footnote 59 Thus, public trust cases require courts to engage in a fact-intensive inquiry to determine when the doctrine applies.
Not only must courts ‘determine the threshold question of whether a particular resource is a part of the public trust subject to the doctrine, but the courts must also determine whether based on the facts there has been a breach of the trust’.Footnote 60 In Kanuk v State, which also concerned an atmospheric trust claim, the Supreme Court of Alaska explained that because Alaskan courts ‘interpret the public trust doctrine in a constitutional context’, the judiciary ‘has the constitutionally mandated duty to ensure compliance with the provisions of the Alaska Constitution’ when it reviews public trust claims.Footnote 61 The court held that ‘whether the State has breached [its fiduciary] legal duty is a question we are well equipped to answer’ once ‘the extent of the State’s duty’ has been judicially determined based on the facts of the case.Footnote 62 If it were not up to the courts to evaluate when a sovereign has abdicated its public trust duties, such an inquiry would have no proper forum.
In fact, although the public trust doctrine is not explicitly laid out in Colombia’s constitution, the Supreme Court of Colombia has held that the fundamental principle of protecting natural resources for the benefit of the population is enshrined in the constitutional right to a healthy environment.Footnote 63 In Future Generations v Ministry of Environment and Others, twenty-five youth plaintiffs filed suit against the Colombian government for violating their fundamental rights to a healthy environment, life, health, food, and water by failing to curtail deforestation in the Amazon. The court concluded that the protection of fundamental rights is inextricably linked with the protection of nature, and further, that natural resources such as the Amazon Rainforest belong to all inhabitants of the planet, including those as yet unborn.Footnote 64 This recognition of the interconnectedness of fundamental human rights and the rights of nature, and of the shared use by present and future generations of natural resources, are the same basic principles that underpin the protection of natural resources under the public trust doctrine.
Similarly, in Advocates Coalition for Development and Environment (ACODE) v Attorney General,Footnote 65 ACODE sued the Ugandan government for failing to fulfil its duty as trustee of the Butamira Forest Reserve by granting a private permit to harvest firewood from the forest. The High Court of Uganda determined that the Attorney General had failed in his obligations under Article 237(2)(b) of the Ugandan Constitution, which lays out the government’s duty to hold rivers, lakes, and forest reserves, inter alia, in trust for the Ugandan people. By granting the harvesting permit without conducting an environmental impact assessment and without consulting the local communities who rely on the Butamira Forest Reserve for their livelihoods and spiritual practices, the government violated its duty as trustee, and failed in ‘its constitutional and statutory duty to conserve the environment and natural resources equitably and for the benefit of both the present and future generations’.Footnote 66 In this case, therefore, the public trust doctrine was applied not only to natural resource protection, but also to the protection of cultural and religious traditions associated with the resource in question.
This jurisprudence suggests that the public trust doctrine, even in the absence of explicit ‘public trust’ language, may apply more broadly to important natural resources and is flexible enough to evolve with changing societal needs. If so, the judiciary’s role is to determine both when a particular resource falls within the doctrine’s scope and when the sovereign has violated or failed to meet its public trust duties concerning public trust resources.
10.2.2 The Constitutional Recognition Framework
Several courts have rooted their support for an atmospheric trust in constitutional language establishing public rights in, or the sovereign’s responsibility for, air, climate, a healthy environment, or natural resources generally. Some experts ‘observe that cases advancing constitutional theories of climate obligation are swiftly gaining ground in the world’s domestic courts’.Footnote 67 Judicial embrace is strongest when the relevant constitutional provision also speaks to principles of intergenerational equity, which this chapter identifies as an emerging best practice. Judicial recognition of a broad public trust capable of including the atmosphere illustrates that the doctrine is subject to expansion.
10.2.2.1 Air and Atmosphere
An atmospheric trust exists where constitutional language establishes public rights in, and the sovereign’s duty over, air and climate. For example, Article I Section 27 of the Pennsylvania Constitution unequivocally states that ‘the people have a right to clean air’.Footnote 68 That section declares that ‘Pennsylvania’s public natural resources are the common property of all the people, including generations yet to come’, and requires the state, ‘as trustee of these resources’, to ‘conserve and maintain them for the benefit of all the people’.Footnote 69 The state constitution, therefore, embodies two of the three categories of restrictions on the sovereign’s authority to administer the natural resources trust: Trust property must be held available for public use and maintained for public uses.
In Funk v Wolf, the Pennsylvania Commonwealth court explained that the first provision of Section 27 ‘endows the people of Pennsylvania with the right to the described resources’, thereby ‘prevent[ing] the state from acting in ways that would infringe upon such rights’.Footnote 70 By placing Pennsylvania’s natural resources – including clean air – in trust for the people,Footnote 71 the second provision enables citizens to bring a legal challenge against government actions and inactions infringing on the rights recognised in the first provision, proceeding upon either or both of two theories: ‘the government has infringed upon citizens’ rights’ or ‘has failed in its trustee obligations’.Footnote 72 The court thereby properly recognised the two categories of restrictions imposed by the Pennsylvania Constitution.
Similarly, in Sanders-Reed v Martinez, the New Mexico Court of Appeals concluded that the state’s constitution ‘recognizes that a public trust duty exists for the protection of New Mexico’s natural resources, including the atmosphere, for the benefit of the people’.Footnote 73 Section 21 of Article XX of the New Mexico Constitution provides that ‘the protection of the state’s beautiful and healthful environment is hereby declared to be of fundamental importance to the public interest’ and requires the state to ‘provide for control of pollution and control of despoilment of the air’ and other natural resources ‘for the maximum benefit of the people’.Footnote 74 Thus, the court held, ‘the State has a duty to protect the atmosphere’ pursuant to its clear ‘constitutional mandate’.Footnote 75 The court recognised the same two categories of restrictions in the New Mexico Constitution – the sovereign must hold natural resources in trust for public use and maintain those resources consistent with public uses.
The Supreme Court of Hawai‘i in In re Application of Gas Co recently explained that ‘a state agency must perform its functions in a manner that fulfils the State’s affirmative obligations under the Hawai‘i constitution’, including its obligations as a trustee of ‘all public natural resources’.Footnote 76 The Hawai‘i Constitution provides that, ‘[f]or the benefit of present and future generations, the State … shall conserve and protect Hawaii’s natural beauty and all natural resources, including land, water, air, and other resources’.Footnote 77 Thus, the court concluded that ‘the state has a continuing duty to monitor the use of trust property, even if the use of the property has not changed’, and that a state agency’s ‘constitutional obligations are ongoing’.Footnote 78
These cases illustrate that where the relevant constitution speaks to public rights in, and the sovereign’s duty over, air or climate, courts have embraced the atmosphere as within the scope of the public trust res. Nevertheless, many other courts have reached the same conclusion where such explicit constitutional language about air or climate is lacking.
10.2.2.2 A Healthy Environment
Several courts have rooted their recognition of an atmospheric trust in constitutional language that establishes public rights in, and the sovereign’s duty over, a healthy environment. Moreover, according to these courts, the right to a healthy environment is inherent in other, constitutionally enumerated fundamental rights. By extension, the sovereign’s maintenance and preservation of a healthy atmosphere are essential to fulfilling the public’s fundamental rights.
As the Supreme Court of the Philippines explained, ‘the right to a balanced and healthful ecology carries with it the correlative duty to refrain from impairing the environment’.Footnote 79 The right to a healthy environment, therefore, mandates not only that the state hold trust property – in this context, the environment as a whole – available for public use, but also that the state maintain the environment’s health to ensure the continued viability of the public’s use of trust property. Although the court did not explicitly reference the public trust doctrine in its ruling, the reasoning in the decision is grounded in the idea that natural resources are held in trust by the state. In this way, the right to a healthy environment embodies the first and third categories of restrictions on the sovereign’s authority to administer the natural resources trust: Trust resources must be held open for public use and maintained consistent with public uses.Footnote 80
In Sher Singh v State of Himachal Pradesh, the National Green Tribunal of India unequivocally declared that ‘the citizens of the country have a fundamental right to a wholesome, clean and decent environment’ under India’s constitution.Footnote 81 Citing judgments by the Supreme Court of India from the 1980s onward,Footnote 82 the court concluded that ‘Article 21 of [India’s] constitutionFootnote 83 has been expanded to take within its ambit the right to a clean and decent environment’ as part of a broader ‘right to life and personal liberty’.Footnote 84 The court explained that the ‘wide dimensions’ of Article 21 have consistently been construed by Indian courts ‘in the larger public interest’.Footnote 85 Therefore, the court held that the public interest demands that ‘the most vital necessities, namely air … cannot be permitted to be misused or polluted so as to reduce the quality of life of others’.Footnote 86 The court also made clear that when the sovereign enacts environmental statutes and regulations, it must do so consistent with its role as ‘the trustee of all natural resources which are by [their] nature meant for public use and enjoyment’ and of which ‘the public at large is the beneficiary’.Footnote 87 Thus, the court signalled its willingness to review legislation for consistency with the public trust doctrine.Footnote 88
Similarly, the Lahore High Court of Pakistan in Asghar Leghari began its decision by recognising that ‘climate change is a defining challenge of our time and has led to dramatic alterations in our planet’s climate system’.Footnote 89 Against this backdrop, the court determined that ‘[o]n a legal and constitutional plane’, climate change presents a ‘clarion call for the protection of fundamental rights of the citizens of Pakistan’.Footnote 90 Thus, the court pointed to ‘fundamental rights’ in Pakistan’s constitution, emphasising that such rights ‘read with constitutional principles of democracy, equality, [and] social, economic and political justice’.Footnote 91 The court focused on Article 9,Footnote 92 the right to life, ‘which includes the right to a healthy and clean environment’, and Article 14,Footnote 93 the right to human dignity.Footnote 94
The Leghari court concluded that these fundamental rights also ‘include within their ambit and commitment’ numerous environmental principles such as ‘inter and intra-generational equity and [the] public trust doctrine’.Footnote 95 In fact, according to the court, environmental protection has taken ‘center stage’ in Pakistan’s scheme of constitutional rights.Footnote 96 The court was thus satisfied that the fundamental rights articulated in Articles 9 and 14, bolstered by Article 23’s right to property and Article 19(A)’s right to information, provided ‘the necessary judicial toolkit to address and monitor the Government’s response to climate change’.Footnote 97 Therefore, the court held that, concerning climate change measures, the sovereign could not continue on its course of ‘delay and lethargy’ and thereby ‘offend … the fundamental rights of the citizens which need to be safeguarded’.Footnote 98
Finally, in Foster v State Department of Ecology, a Washington lower court accepted petitioners’ characterisation that where the public’s ‘rights to a healthy environment’ are constitutionally protected, those rights are actually protected ‘by the Public Trust Doctrine embodied therein’.Footnote 99 In other words, the court accepted the proposition that a constitutional right to a healthy environment is actually the recognition of inherent public rights in the environment.Footnote 100 The court explained that it allowed petitioners’ case to proceed ‘due to the emergent need for coordinated science[-]based action by the State of Washington to address climate change before efforts to do so are too costly and too late’.Footnote 101 By recognising that petitioners were entitled to an opportunity to ‘show evidence and argue that their government has failed and continues to fail to protect them from global warming’,Footnote 102 the court embraced its judicial role to determine when the sovereign has failed to meet its public trust duties.Footnote 103
These cases show that where the relevant constitution speaks to public rights to, and the sovereign’s duty over, a healthy environment, courts have concluded that the atmosphere is within the scope of the public trust res. This right to a healthy environment is inherent in other, constitutionally enumerated fundamental rights. This trend – which has a robust presence in international jurisprudence outside of the United States – indicates that courts understand a stable climate system as necessary to environmental health and well-being.
10.2.2.3 Natural Resources
Some courts have grounded their recognition of an atmospheric trust in constitutional language that establishes public rights in, and the sovereign’s duty over, natural resources generally, even absent an explicit reference to air or climate. As the Pennsylvania Supreme Court noted, when ‘natural resources’ appears, unqualified, in constitutional language, ‘the term fairly implicates relatively broad aspects of the environment, and is amenable to change over time to conform, for example, with the development of related legal and societal concerns’.Footnote 104 Indeed, the public trust doctrine is a versatile legal tool for natural resource protection.
Some courts, however, have been unwilling to expand the traditional scope of the doctrine to include natural resources more broadly. For example, in Aji P v State,Footnote 105 youth plaintiffs contended that they had ‘alleged valid public trust doctrine claims’ in their complaint against the state of Washington for its reliance on fossil fuels because ‘navigable waters and the atmosphere are intertwined’.Footnote 106 In the plaintiffs’ view, ‘to argue a separation of the two, or to argue that [greenhouse gas] emissions do not affect navigable waters’, would be ‘nonsensical’ on the state’s part.Footnote 107 However, looking to the Washington State Constitution, which enumerates the traditional definition of state ownership over the beds and shores of navigable waters, the Washington Court of Appeal disagreed.Footnote 108
The court concluded that the ‘complaint alleges a violation of the public trust doctrine in relation to the climate system as a whole, including the atmosphere’, whereas ‘Washington has not yet expanded the public trust doctrine to encompass the atmosphere’.Footnote 109 Although the plaintiffs maintained that they ‘alleged impairment to traditional Public Trust Resources such as navigable waters and submerged lands’, the court was unpersuaded.Footnote 110 In fact, the court deemed this a ‘recharacterization’ of plaintiffs’ allegations, paying particular attention to plaintiffs’ assertion in their complaint that ‘the overarching public trust resource is the climate system, which encompasses the atmosphere, waters, oceans, and biosphere’.Footnote 111 In short, by framing the ‘effect on the public’s ability to use, access, enjoy and navigate the state’s tidelands, shorelands, and navigable waters’ as a consequence of climate change,Footnote 112 the plaintiffs were unable to satisfy the court’s restrictive reading of the public trust doctrine in the context of narrow constitutional language.
In contrast, some courts have accepted that the doctrine applies to all natural resources, including the atmosphere. In Bonser-Lain v State Commission on Environmental Quality, a Texas lower court held that ‘the public trust doctrine includes all natural resources of the State including the air and atmosphere’.Footnote 113 The court was unpersuaded by the state commission’s contention that ‘the public trust doctrine in Texas is exclusively limited to the conservation of the State’s waters’, finding this argument ‘legally invalid’.Footnote 114 The court reasoned that the doctrine had been incorporated into section 59 of Article XVI of the Texas Constitution, which provides that the conservation, development, and preservation ‘of all of the natural resources of this State’ are ‘declared public rights and duties’, and which therefore recognises an expansive public trust res.Footnote 115
In Held v State, a Montana district court held that the state’s practice of ignoring climate change when approving energy projects may implicate the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.Footnote 116 Following Montana Supreme Court precedent, the court concluded that ‘a clean and healthful environment is a “fundamental right” under Article IX of the Montana Constitution’,Footnote 117 and that this right is linked to the state’s obligation ‘to prevent unreasonable degradation of natural resources’.Footnote 118 While not explicitly using ‘public trust’ language, the court recognised that the inclusion of a state duty over natural resources in the Montana Constitution provides ‘protections which are both anticipatory and preventative’.Footnote 119 Indeed, the Montana Constitution does not force the state into allowing a ‘degree of environmental degradation which can be conclusively linked to ill health or physical endangerment’ before the state’s ‘farsighted environmental protections can be invoked’.Footnote 120 Instead, the state has an affirmative duty to protect natural resources from substantial impairment.Footnote 121
These cases demonstrate that where the relevant constitution speaks to public rights in, and the sovereign’s duty over, natural resources, courts have interpreted such language to recognise resources beyond those traditionally associated with the public trust doctrine – including the atmosphere – as within the scope of the public trust res. Although language referencing ‘natural resources’ does not bring about the same clear reference to the atmosphere as language concerning the air or climate, broad constitutional language may allow for greater judicial flexibility as the public trust doctrine continues to be applied to new resources and challenges. Moreover, several courts have recognised that the state has affirmative obligations to protect trust resources.
10.2.3 The Inter-Resource Affectation Framework
Although courts have not always concluded that the atmosphere itself is a public trust resource, several have concluded that threats to non-traditional public trust resources are intricately connected to traditional public trust resources. In those courts’ view, this relationship – which this chapter terms ‘inter-resource affectation’ – brings plaintiffs’ claims within the scope of the public trust doctrine. In this way, courts can recognise an atmospheric trust without explicitly defining the scope of the public trust res. Several cases reflect this framework; they primarily arise in the United States where a federalist system of dual sovereigns, the federal government and the states, has produced different definitions of the public trust in different jurisdictions.
The principle of inter-resource affectation is perhaps best illustrated by courts’ recognition of groundwater as within the scope of the public trust doctrine, even though groundwater is not a traditional public trust resource. For example, in In re Water Use Permit Applications for Waiāhole Ditch, the Supreme Court of Hawai‘i concluded that there was ‘little sense in adhering to artificial distinctions’ between groundwater and surface waters – a distinction not ‘borne out in the present practical realities of this state’.Footnote 122 The court reasoned that ‘in other states, the “purposes” or “uses” of the public trust have evolved with changing public values and needs’, including recognition of a ‘distinct public interest in resource protection’.Footnote 123 Moreover, the court recognised that ‘modern science and technology have discredited the surface-ground[water] dichotomy’ and instead acknowledge ‘the unity of the hydrological cycle’.Footnote 124 Therefore, the court deferred to a state commission’s invocation of the precautionary principleFootnote 125 to protect instream water uses, agreeing that ‘public trust purposes’ (public use of the public trust res) should prevail over diversionary interests.Footnote 126 In reaching its decision, the court was persuaded by the underlying scientific consensus that certain natural resources – here, ground and surface waters – form two parts of a larger, interconnected system.
Similarly, in Environmental Law Foundation v State Water Resources Control Board, the California Court of Appeal affirmed a trial court’s holding that the public trust doctrine applies to groundwater if extraction ‘adversely impacts a navigable waterway’.Footnote 127 In other words, where ‘the removal of water will have an adverse impact on navigable water clearly within the public trust’, the court was satisfied that it could evaluate groundwater pumping for compliance with the public trust doctrine.Footnote 128 Given judicial embrace of an inter-resource affectation framework in the groundwater context, courts have paved the way for this framework to apply to other non-traditional public trust resources, including the atmosphere, where their degradation impairs navigable waterways clearly within the traditional public trust res.
10.3 Emerging Best Practices
This section explores the emerging best practices in atmospheric trust case law. Section 10.3.1 discusses the emerging best practice of constitutional recognition coupled with language that speaks to intergenerational equity. Section 10.3.2 discusses the emerging best practice of applying the inter-resource affectation framework to the atmosphere. Finally, Section 10.3.2 discusses how the inter-resource affectation framework may be most successfully applied when plaintiffs’ claims are grounded in a fundamental constitutional right, such as substantive due process.
10.3.1 Constitutional Recognition and Intergenerational Equity
Constitutional language that speaks to intergenerational equity – in addition to air, climate, a healthy environment, or natural resources – strengthens a court’s application of the public trust doctrine to non-traditional public trust resources, such as the atmosphere. Intergenerational constitutional protection establishes a temporal relationship that mirrors basic trust principles. Because a trustee traditionally owes a duty ‘equally to both current and future beneficiaries of the trust’,Footnote 129 the sovereign owes its duties to current and future generations and cannot sanction substantial impairment of the trust res solely to serve present-day needs.Footnote 130 Even when courts have not used ‘public trust’ language, their discussion of the sovereign’s intergenerational duties with respect to natural resources fits within public trust doctrine jurisprudence.
In Urgenda Foundation v The State of The Netherlands, the Hague District Court held that ‘Article 21 of the Dutch ConstitutionFootnote 131 imposes a duty of care on the State relating to the liveability of the country and the protection and improvement of the living environment’.Footnote 132 The court engaged in a two-part inquiry to determine whether the sovereign was ‘taking sufficient mitigation measures’ to meet its duty of care with respect to climate change.Footnote 133 First, it asked whether there was an ‘unlawful hazardous negligence on the part of the State’; second, the court assessed the government’s actions in light of ‘the State’s discretionary power’.Footnote 134 Simply put, the court sought to discern whether the state’s duty of care had been triggered and, if so, what actions the state needed to take to meet that affirmative duty.Footnote 135
The Urgenda Foundation court determined that the ‘high risk of dangerous climate change with severe and life-threatening consequences for man and the environment’ triggered the state’s ‘obligation to protect its citizens from [climate change] by taking appropriate and effective measures’,Footnote 136 including mitigation, as plaintiffs had requested.Footnote 137 In other words, the imminence and dangerousness of climate change triggered the state’s duty of care.Footnote 138 Stressing that ‘the possibility of damages for those whose interests Urgenda represents, including current and future generations of Dutch nationals, is so great and concrete’, the court ruled that ‘the State must make an adequate contribution … to prevent hazardous climate change’ consistent with its ‘duty of care’.Footnote 139 Thus satisfied that the state’s duty of care was triggered, the court held that the state was obliged to take effective mitigating and remedial measures.Footnote 140
Similarly, in Neubauer and Others v Germany, the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany held that ‘the fundamental right to the protection of life and health enshrined in’ Article 2 of Germany’s ConstitutionFootnote 141 ‘imposes on the state a general duty of protection of life and physical integrity’, and therefore ‘obliges the state to afford protection against the risks of climate change’.Footnote 142 According to the court, this fundamental right ‘encompasses the state’s duty to protect and promote the legal interests of life and physical integrity and to safeguard these interests against unlawful interference by others’.Footnote 143 In this way, the court equated the state’s obligation to protect against climate change with the sovereign’s public trust duty to safeguard against substantial impairment to the public trust res.Footnote 144
The Neubauer court emphasised that the state’s duty ‘does not take effect only after violations have already occurred’, but is instead an affirmative duty ‘oriented towards the future’ that can also be invoked ‘to protect future generations’.Footnote 145 The protection required of the state, the court continued, ‘encompasses protection against impairments and degradation of constitutionally guaranteed interests caused by environmental pollution, regardless of who or what circumstances are the cause.Footnote 146 The intergenerational scope of this protection, the court reasoned, was necessary ‘[i]n view of the considerable risks’ posed by ‘increasingly severe climate change’Footnote 147 and the burden on future generations who will be forced to grapple with amplified climate effects.
Although affording protection to both present and future generations, the Neubauer court distinguished between present and future climate change and the sovereign’s duties to address each.Footnote 148 As to present climate change that ‘is not preventable or has already taken place’, the court held that the state must ‘address the risks by implementing positive measures aimed at alleviating the consequences of climate change’.Footnote 149 As to future climate change, on the other hand, the court held that the state is obligated ‘to afford protection by taking measures that help to limit anthropogenic global warming and associated climate change’.Footnote 150 The court’s reasoning reflected its understanding of the disproportionate climate effects future generations will face, leading the court to distinguish present-day remedial measures from mitigation designed to slow additional climate change.Footnote 151
Prior to Neubauer, the German legislature had set interim goals with gradual steps to reduce greenhouse gas emissionsFootnote 152 and an overall goal ‘of achieving climate neutrality in the foreseeable future’.Footnote 153 Although the court concluded that the legislative provisions challenged by plaintiffs had not clearly violated the state’s duty of protection to the present generation,Footnote 154 the court nonetheless concluded that those provisions did violate the state’s duty of protection to future generations.Footnote 155 The court faulted the legislature for ‘failing to take sufficient precautionary measures to manage the obligations to reduce emissions in ways that respect fundamental rights-obligations that could be substantial in later periods due to the emissions allowed by law until 2030’.Footnote 156 Thus, while meeting its obligation to the present generation, the German legislature’s climate goals were insufficient to meet the sovereign’s obligation to future generations.Footnote 157
These cases illustrate that, where the relevant constitution speaks to intergenerational equity in connection with the sovereign’s duties to the public, courts have used this language to aid their embrace of an atmospheric trust. Given the long-term, far-reaching threats posed by climate change and the degradation of an inherently ‘public’ resource – the air we breathe – these courts also appear to impose a high burden of proof on the sovereign to show that it is complying with its public trust duties to present and future generations.
10.3.2 Applying the Inter-Resource Affectation Framework to the Atmosphere
The decision of the Oregon Federal District Court in Juliana v United States offers a persuasive application of the inter-resource affectation framework in the atmospheric trust context.Footnote 158 In Juliana, twenty-one youth plaintiffs argued that numerous government entitiesFootnote 159 ‘violated their obligation to hold certain natural resources in trust for the people and for future generations’ by deliberately allowing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations to reach unprecedented levels.Footnote 160 The plaintiffs’ complaint alleged that the government defendants ‘violated their duties as trustees by failing to protect the atmosphere, water, seas, seashores, and wildlife’.Footnote 161 The defendants countered that ‘plaintiffs’ public trust claims fail because the complaint focuses on harm to the atmosphere, which is not a public trust asset’.Footnote 162 The court, however, decided it was unnecessary ‘to determine whether the atmosphere is a public trust asset’ given that plaintiffs had ‘alleged violations of the public trust doctrine in connection with the territorial sea’,Footnote 163 a traditional public trust resource.
The federal district court of Oregon concluded that ‘because a number of plaintiffs’ injuries relate to the effects of ocean acidification and rising ocean temperatures’, plaintiffs had ‘adequately alleged harm to public trust assets’.Footnote 164 The court was satisfied that harm to the atmosphere, when it impairs long-recognised public trust resources, implicates the public trust doctrine, effectively applying the inter-resource affectation framework.Footnote 165 This reasoning is consistent with prior judicial practice of looking past artificial distinctions between natural resources (such as ground and surface waters) to expand the application of the public trust doctrine beyond those resources traditionally within the public trust res.Footnote 166
10.3.3 Inter-Resource Affectation with Constitutional Grounding
Although viable in its own right, the inter-resource affectation framework may find its strongest application when coupled with a constitutional grounding. Unlike constitutional language establishing public rights in air, climate, a healthy environment, or natural resources, a constitutional grounding refers to the public’s fundamental right to engage in the judicial process to hold the sovereign accountable for its exercise of sovereign duties.
For example, the federal court in Juliana included the atmosphere in the public trust doctrine’s scope as a matter of inter-resource affectation.Footnote 167 But in Juliana, the court also considered plaintiffs’ claims on constitutional grounds rooted in the US Constitution’s Due Process Clause.Footnote 168 Because the court determined that public trust rights were implicit in due process,Footnote 169 this constitutional grounding provided the court with a catalyst to vindicate plaintiffs’ public trust rights. Although the sovereign’s public trust duties exist independent of any constitutional recognition, where plaintiffs (and courts) point to a constitutional provision that contemplates the public’s right to enforce those duties, such constitutional grounding can act as a vehicle for judicial recognition of public trust rights.
In Juliana, the youth plaintiffs argued, in addition to their public trust claims, that numerous government entities were violating plaintiffs’ ‘substantive due process rights to life, liberty, and property’ by deliberately allowing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations to reach unprecedented levels.Footnote 170 The court agreed, holding that plaintiffs had ‘adequately alleged infringement of a fundamental right’.Footnote 171 According to the court: ‘Where a complaint alleges governmental action is affirmatively and substantially damaging the climate system in a way that will cause human deaths, shorten human lifespans, result in widespread damage to property, threaten human food sources, and dramatically alter the planet’s ecosystem, it states a claim for a due process violation.’Footnote 172 As the court saw it, ‘to hold otherwise would be to say that the Constitution affords no protection against a government’s knowing decision to poison the air its citizens breathe or the water its citizens drink’.Footnote 173 In other words, these fundamental rights need not be explicitly stated in a constitution to benefit from constitutional protection.
The federal district court proceeded to rule that ‘plaintiffs’ public trust rights both predated the [US] Constitution and are secured by it, although plaintiffs’ right of action to enforce the government’s obligations as trustee arises from the Constitution’.Footnote 174 The court explained that ‘the Due Process Clause’s substantive component safeguards fundamental rights that are “implicit” in the concept of ordered liberty’ or ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.Footnote 175 According to the court, ‘[p]laintiffs’ public trust rights, related as they are to inherent aspects of sovereignty and the consent of the governed from which the United States’ authority derives, satisfy both tests’.Footnote 176 In other words, the Due Process Clause – and its protection of fundamental rights – acted as a vehicle for the court to consider plaintiffs’ fundamental public trust rights.Footnote 177
10.4 Replicability
As noted earlier, even in countries where the public trust doctrine is not explicitly enshrined in the legal tradition, constitutional protection to a healthy environment, natural resources, or intergenerational equity, may offer an avenue for courts to apply the principles of the public trust doctrine. Given the protection afforded these rights in constitutions around the world, this feature of emerging best practice appears to be highly replicable.
However, unlike the constitutional recognition framework – an emerging best practice that is well represented in international case law – the inter-resource affectation framework is ripe for further development. The takeaways from Juliana and Aji P illustrate how plaintiffs and judges can engage in that development.
The Juliana court’s discussion of substantive due process indicates that where the relevant constitution does not contain express language establishing public rights in or the sovereign’s responsibility for air, climate, a healthy environment, or natural resources, the strength of a plaintiff’s atmospheric trust claim can rest upon the ties the plaintiff establishes between climate change and traditional public trust resources – that is, upon inter-resource affectation. Although the court in Aji P failed to apply the inter-resource affectation framework, it does not foreclose atmospheric trust claims more explicitly rooted in the impairment of traditional public trust resources. Referring to climate change impacts ‘on already-recognized public trust resources such as water, shorelines, wildlife, and fish’, the Supreme Court of Alaska has recognised that ‘[a]llegations that the State has breached its duties with regard to the management of these resources do not depend on a declaratory judgment about the atmosphere’.Footnote 178 Therefore, a court need not decide that the atmosphere is a public trust resource to consider the effects of climate change on traditional public trust resources under the inter-resource affectation framework.
Had the Aji P plaintiffs claimed that greenhouse gases, particularly dissolved carbon dioxide, create higher river and stream temperatures that impair the public’s ability to fish and recreate in those waters, the court would have been more likely to see this injury as directly tied to plaintiffs’ use of traditional public trust resources. Likewise, the navigability of traditionally navigable waters has been and continues to be threatened by climate change.Footnote 179 Because climate change stresses water availability and thereby alters the structure of rivers and streams,Footnote 180 a claim of impairment to navigability could bolster an atmospheric trust claim where a plaintiff cannot assist her position with helpful constitutional language. In other words, alleging impairment to navigable waterways as a result of climate change, rather than alleging impairment to the climate that in turn affects navigable waterways, frames the issue in terms more closely aligned with a limited reading of a narrow state doctrine.
10.5 Conclusion
Courts around the world have applied the public trust doctrine to the atmosphere in the context of climate change litigation using two analytical frameworks: constitutional recognition and inter-resource affectation. Under the first framework, constitutional recognition, sovereigns recognise – and courts enforce – the ecological importance of protecting air, climate, a healthy environment, and natural resources based on constitutional language establishing public rights to and the sovereign’s duty over such resources. Constitutional recognition is strongest when the relevant constitutional language also speaks to principles of intergenerational equity, an emerging best practice. Under the second framework, inter-resource affectation, courts recognise the inherent ecological ties between navigable waters and other resources. Using this approach, at least one court has held that the atmosphere falls within the public trust doctrine’s scope even when the atmosphere is not defined as an asset within the public trust res, another emerging best practice.
Judicial invocation of either of the discussed frameworks gives rise to an atmospheric trust that the sovereign must manage in the public interest consistent with trust principles. Once courts recognise the atmosphere as within the scope of the public trust res, the sovereign can no longer shirk its fiduciary duty to ‘protect the trust property against damage or destruction’Footnote 181 by allowing climate change to progress unabated.