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15 November 2024
Three rulings of the European Court of Human Rights given on 9 April 2024 have set the global tone for climate protection actions before national courts. The Court found that Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights covers the right of individuals to effective climate protection by the State authorities from serious adverse effects of climate change on their life, health, well-being and quality of life and further specified the requirements of the victim status under the European Convention on Human Rights.
Three rulings were published by the European Court of Human Rights ("ECHR") on 9 April 2024, in this article we discuss the outcome of those cases and how they might affect future cases.
While two out of the three claims were dismissed as inadmissible, these cases are still instructive for future legal disputes.
In contrast, Verein KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz and others v. Switzerland ("Verein KlimaSeniorinnen") was successful and provides the basis for further legally enforceable climate protection. A summary as well as the official press releases of the individual cases can be found here.
Under Article 34 of the European Convention on Human Rights (the "Convention"), applicants must show that they are personally and directly affected by governmental action or inaction for complaints to be admissible – the Convention does not allow general public interest complaints. They have to show that they are victims. The requirement for being personally affected is also found in many national procedural laws and has been an obstacle for individuals bringing claims in national courts.
In this case, Article 34 of the Convention, which has traditionally been applied rather strictly, has been found to allow associations recourse to legal action in the context of climate change. The threshold also in climate related cases for associations now seems to be easier to meet than for individuals. This paves the way for future climate protection lawsuits.
The three cases before the ECHR centred on the obligation of the sued states to make greater efforts to protect the climate. However, they differ with regard to the applicants, defendants and national legal remedies. Below, we set out a summary of the three judgments.
Claims and national appeal proceedings
Four individual applicants and Verein KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz, an association of over 2,500 women of retirement age, complained that Swiss authorities have not taken sufficient action to mitigate the effects of climate change, despite their obligations under the Convention.
Please refer to the press release for a more detailed overview of the procedural process.
Strict requirements for establishing the victim status in individual actions
According to the ECHR, individual applicants need to be able to show that they are personally and directly affected by government action or inaction and meet the following criteria: (a) the applicant must be exposed to the adverse effects of climate change to a high degree and (b) there must be an urgent need to ensure the individual protection of the applicant.
The Court emphasised that, in order to avoid general public interest complaints (actio popularis), a particularly high threshold for establishing victim status must be applied. Specifically, it requires a careful examination of the nature and scope of the individual applicants' complaints and the material they have submitted, the degree of likelihood and/or probability of the adverse effects of climate change over time, the specific impact on the life, health or well-being of the specific applicant, the extent and duration of the adverse effects, the extent of the risk (local or general) and the nature of the complainant's vulnerability. These requirements will be examined by the ECHR on a case-by-case basis.
In Verein KlimaSeniorinnen, the four individual applicants were found not to fulfil these requirements.
Community interests can be pursued by associations
With regard to the association itself, Verein KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz, the Court found that climate change is a concern shared by all generations. Certain interests can only be effectively defended by allowing collective actions. The association does not need to meet the requirement that each individual on whose behalf the association is bringing the claim would themselves be a victim.
The ECHR specified the requirements to be met by associations in order to act for individuals in a claim such as this:
1) the association must be lawfully established or have the capacity to act in the relevant jurisdiction;
2) the association must be able to demonstrate that its purpose is to defend the human rights of its members or other affected persons in the relevant jurisdiction whether limited to, or including, collective action for the protection of those rights against the threats of climate change; and
3) the association must be able to demonstrate that it is qualified to defend the rights of its members and other persons concerned.
According to the ECHR, Verein KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz was able to meet these requirements.
Unlike the individual applicants, the association was therefore able to file a complaint about the threats posed by climate change in the defendant state on behalf of those persons who could legitimately claim to be exposed to specific threats or adverse effects of climate change on their lives, health, well-being and quality of life.
Climate protection was found to be a human right
Climate change is a globally and scientifically recognised. Due to the causal link between state measures (or state failure to act) and the dangers and damage caused by climate change, the ECHR found that Article 8 of the Convention also covers the right of individuals to effective climate protection measures by the respective state authorities. So climate protection measures must protect against serious adverse effects of climate change on life, health, well-being and quality of life.
The ECHR found that Switzerland had failed to comply with its Convention duties. The Swiss authorities had not acted in a timely or appropriate manner with regard to the enactment of climate protection legislation and other climate protection measures.
Claims and national appeal proceedings
On 19 November 2018, Damien Carême, mayor of the municipality of Grande-Synthe from 23 March 2001 to 3 July 2019, requested, on his own behalf and in his capacity as mayor of the municipality of Grande-Synthe, the President of the Republic, the Prime Minister and the Minister for Ecological Transition and Solidarity to take all necessary measures to curb climate change so that France can comply with the commitments it has made. He received no response.
For further information as well as the national development of the legal dispute with the municipality of Grande-Synthe, please see the press release.
Inadmissibility due to a missing victim status
Carême filed his complaint against France with the European Court of Human Rights on 28 January 2021. He stated that France had taken inadequate measures to prevent climate change. This led to a violation of his right to life (Article 2 of the Convention) and his right to respect for his private and family life and home (Article 8 of the Convention).
His case was ultimately dismissed for lack of standing of the applicant. While the ECHR did not question the statements on the dangers of climate change, it rejected Carême's victim status under Article 34 of the Convention, citing a lack of relevant connection to his municipality in France (as he became a Member of the European Parliament in May 2019 and moved to Brussels). The ECHR also denied victim status in regards to his position as former mayor of Grande-Synthe. The action was therefore declared inadmissible.
Content and scope of the claim
Duarte was brought by six Portuguese nationals, born between 1999 and 2012, who complained about the serious existing and future effects of climate change. The applicants did not seek recourse to the national courts, but turned directly to the ECHR. The case filed on 7 September 2020 targets the Portuguese Republic and 32 other European states.
In their complaint, the applicants referred to the extreme temperatures and heat Portugal has experienced and the wildfires. They relied on various Convention articles, recent reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the Paris Agreement and the UN Convention on Rights of the Child to demonstrate the basis of the claim and the effects of climate change. They contended that deep and rapid emissions cuts were need to achieve the 1.5 degree Celsius pathway.
The ECHR had to decide whether the problem of climate change, which transcends national borders, also gives rise to cross-border jurisdiction. For further information on the procedure, please read the press release.
No extended jurisdiction of the ECHR
While the ECHR recognised that the 33 States sued had entered into international agreements, such as the Paris Agreement, in which they undertook to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, it ultimately dismissed the claim as inadmissible. While the ECHR recognises the supranational problem of climate change, it denied an extension of the Convention’s jurisdiction based on this. Contrary to the applicants’ argument, the Convention does not serve as a safeguard for general climate protection. Rather, the Convention aims to establish a system of protection based on the principles of territorial jurisdiction and subsidiarity. For this reason, the applicants' argument that their EU citizenship gives rise to jurisdiction at least for the 27 sued EU Member States, also failed: the jurisdiction was limited to Portugal.
Domestic options for legal protection not fully exhausted
The ECHR also found that the applicants had failed to fully exhaust their national legal remedies in Portugal, so the action was also found inadmissible on this ground.
The ECHR found that the right to a healthy and ecologically balanced environment is expressly enshrined in the Portuguese constitution (Article 66) and that this constitutional provision is also directly applicable and enforceable by national courts. This means that there was a realistic possibility of legal protection for the applicants in Portugal. In the absence of obvious impracticability, the national legal process must therefore be pursued.
Victim status was not sufficiently presented
Ultimately, the ECHR also found that the applicants did not meet the requirements for victim status as required by Article 34 of the Convention. In particular, the individual situation of the applicants was not sufficiently presented, which according to the ECHR was due to the failure to exhaust national legal protection options.
Looking to other jurisdictions: on 21 March 2024, India's Supreme Court set out a right to be protected from the adverse effects of climate change and that this right should be included in Articles 14 and 21 of the Indian Constitution.
This note is intended to be a general guide and covers questions of law and practice. It does not constitute legal advice in relation to a particular transaction or situation. Please contact your usual Hogan Lovells contact if you have questions about these cases or the article.
Published by Nicole Saurin, Dr. Carla Wiedeck, Sebastian Graeler and Emily Julier.
supported by Dariush Hauck