A lawsuit in Brazil may shape the future of global climate litigation

Latin America’s human rights court held a final hearing for the largest climate litigation case to date on May 29, 2024. The case is a part of a wave of new, global climate litigation and may shape global legal precedent and future climate litigation.

At the Amazon Theatre in Brazil, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights hears a landmark climate case on May 28. The case is likely to change global, legal precedent, around climate cases.

Bruno Kelly/Reuters

May 30, 2024

Latin America’s human rights court held a final hearing in Brazil on May 29 in a case that’s part of a global wave of climate litigation, as several international courts prepare first-time opinions on what countries must do to combat climate change.

The rulings could also set off a wave of new litigation brought by citizens, businesses, and governments.

Enforcement of such decisions is largely untested, however. A Swiss parliamentary committee last week rejected a ruling for example by a top European court that said Switzerland had violated the human rights of its citizens by not doing enough to prevent climate change.

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The Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR), which holds jurisdiction over 20 Latin American and Caribbean countries, hopes to issue its advisory opinion by year’s end, top justice Nancy Hernandez Lopez told Reuters. The final hearing on May 29 was held in the Amazon rainforest city of Manaus.

Already last week, the international tribunal set up under the U.N. Law of the Seas decided that carbon emissions amount to marine pollution and that countries must go beyond the Paris Agreement to protect oceans.

Next year, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) is expected to have its say and could attempt to draw the earlier court decisions into one global ruling applicable to all U.N. members.

“The reason for [the wave of litigation] is people’s deep frustration that their elected representatives are not taking rapid and fair climate action,” said Lucy Maxwell, co-director of the nonprofit Climate Litigation Network.

“The climate litigation landscape is really broad and diverse and massively growing.”

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Setting precedents

While multilateral court opinions apply only to the states under their jurisdiction, they are all grappling with the same central question: Are governments obligated to protect people from climate change? And if so – to what degree?

That question is taking courts into uncharted territory, as there is little legal precedent on climate change. In deliberating, court judges have been reviewing climate science, holding hearings, and digging through a tangle of laws, treaties, and U.N. proceedings.

That process has made the case before the Inter-American Court the largest to date – with more than 600 participants at hearings held in Brazil and Barbados, as well as 262 written submissions to the court from Indigenous groups, civil society, scientists, and one company.

Such inclusivity helps give the court its reputation among the world’s most progressive, lawyers said.

By comparison, the International Court of Justice has restricted submissions in its case mostly to countries and authorities like the World Health Organization.

The Latin American court might also borrow arguments from earlier national climate cases, even if they are outside its jurisdiction, said senior lawyer Sophie Marjanac at the legal charity ClientEarth.

“The judges do read each other’s opinions,” Ms. Marjanac said, though whatever influence one ruling has on another might be “more psychological and social than legal.”

As such, the Latin American court could influence the ICJ ruling, expected next year.

Legal scope

Globally, most past court decisions on climate have focused on countries causing harm by failing to sufficiently cut greenhouse gas emissions, including last month’s ruling against Switzerland.

But the opinion from the Inter-American Court could go further by ruling on whether states also must adapt to climate change or pay for damages already caused by climate extremes, Ms. Maxwell said.

The court could address protections for environmental defenders, given Latin America accounts for the vast majority of such activists who are murdered, said climate litigation expert Joana Setzer at the London School of Economics.

It could also address fossil fuels, the main cause of climate change, or spell out the extent to which countries must regulate polluting companies, said climate justice attorney Nikki Reisch at the Center for International Environmental Law.

What comes next?

The multinational court decisions, once released, should provide clarity and guidance for national judges hearing climate cases. But they could also touch off a new wave in climate litigation, lawyers and judges told Reuters.

Major differences between international court decisions could trigger fragmentation where climate change rules differ between regions.

For the ICJ to declare that greenhouse gas emissions contribute to harming other countries “would be already a huge victory,” given the court’s wide jurisdiction, Ms. Setzer said.

Following the Inter-American court’s decision, the governments under its jurisdiction will need to align their laws with the ruling or risk being sued, said Ciro Brito, a lawyer at Brazil’s Instituto Socioambiental, an environmental and Indigenous rights nonprofit in Brazil.

It could give an immediate boost to a handful of legal cases already filed against governments in the region, including one filed by Mexican youths and another demanding more action from Brazil to fight Amazon deforestation.

Globally, Ms. Maxwell counted at least 100 cases pending in national courts accusing governments of failing to meet climate obligations, among many more filed against companies and other defendants.

Other lawyers said they were poised to take action once the Inter-American Court issues its opinion.

“We will use this opinion not only to knock on the government’s door and say, ‘You have to do this,’” said Guilherme Lobo Pecoral, a lawyer for children’s rights nonprofit Alana Institute in Brazil.

“We will also knock on judges’ doors and say, ‘We have this internationally defined obligation and the state isn’t following it.’” 

This story was reported by Reuters.