The use of human rights law in climate change litigation : inquiring human rights obligations of States in the context of climate change; and the use of human rights law in Urgenda and other climate cases
The use of human rights law in climate change litigation : inquiring human rights obligations of States in the context of climate change; and the use of human rights law in Urgenda and other climate cases
Date
2019
Authors
Dewaele, Janne
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus of Human Rights
Abstract
Climate litigation has become very popular in recent years. Increasing numbers
of citizens are taking their governments to court for their lack of action to combat
climate change. Many of these lawsuits are (partly) based on human rights law. Surely,
climate change can, already has and will continue to have a massive impact on the
lives and living conditions of people and thus also on the protection of their human
rights. Using human rights as a basis for a climate change claim against a government
is not waterproof, however. It is not that easy to attribute climate-change related
harm to acts or omissions of specific states and classify these impacts as human rights
violations. There are also issues of admissibility and justiciability. This dissertation
therefore examines which human rights obligations states exactly have in the context
of climate change, and whether or not this entails an obligation to limit greenhouse
gas emissions. To this end, the obligations that have been established on the United
Nations level (with soft law status), and under the European Convention on Human
Rights (with hard law status) are discussed. This thesis further assesses whether or
not these obligations can be used successfully in climate change cases. Different
lawsuits, brought by citizens against their governments, that seek to increase the
governments’ mitigation ambitions or hold them accountable for already existing
climate commitments by using existing human rights provisions, are examined. It
is assessed how human rights law is used within the claims and/or the verdicts of
these different cases, and how certain legal hurdles are being dealt with. The research
findings indicate that there is growing consensus on the fact that there is a human rights
obligation to limit greenhouse gas emissions. Still, this only has soft law status, and the
exact implications of this obligation need to be fine-tuned. It is also possible to use
human rights law as the basis of a climate claim successfully, but multiple difficulties
remain. The success rate will depend, inter alia, on what the factual situation of the
case is, what the national provisions on admissibility are, which human treaties the
state has ratified, and which constitutional provisions can be invoked. Even when
these things work in the applicant’s favour, it will often still be necessary for the judge
to be a bit inventive, as the current human rights mechanisms are not well-suited
to the complex collective problem of climate change. This thesis can be a first step
towards a more structured comparison of the use of human rights law within climate
litigation. The verdict of many currently pending cases will allow a more in-depth and
systematic analysis of this topic.
Description
Second semester University: Université de Montpellier.
Keywords
climatic changes,
environmental law,
human rights,
international obligations,
air pollution,
judicial process