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Climate Change Litigation before the European Court of Human Rights: A New Dawn

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Citation

Savaresi A, Nordlander L & Wewerinke-Singh M (2024) Climate Change Litigation before the European Court of Human Rights: A New Dawn. gnhre.org [Blog post] 12.04.2024. https://gnhre.org/?p=17984

Abstract
First paragraph: On 9 April 2024, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) made history by becoming the first international court to grant a complaint filed by climate activists. In Verein Klimaseniorinnen Schweiz and Others v. Switzerland, the court determined that the respondent state had violated its human rights obligations by failing to adhere to climate targets outlined in national law and to develop credible plans to mitigate future emissions. Simultaneously, the court dismissed two complaints – Duarte Agostinho and others v Portugal and 32 other states, and Carême v France – which were filed on broadly similar grounds, due to procedural deficiencies. In all three, the applicants alleged they had suffered human rights violations, as a result of states’ failure to take adequate action to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. All cases were decided by the court’s Grand Chamber, indicating that they raised ‘a serious question affecting the interpretation’ of the 1950 European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR, Article 30).

Type of mediaBlog post
StatusPublished
Publication date12/04/2024
Publication date online12/04/2024
PublisherGlobal Network for Human Rights and the Environment
Publisher URLhttps://gnhre.org/?p=17984

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