Abstract
The landmark 2015 decision by the Hague District Court in Urgenda v. The Netherlands
represents the first time a national court has expressly used the
international environmental law (IEL) principle of common but
differentiated responsibilities and capabilities (CBDRs) of the climate
regime as a complementary tool to interpret the scope of a state’s
climate obligations under domestic law. This article highlights that
despite the marked engagement of national courts with IEL in recent
decades (including engaging with principles such as sustainable
development, polluter pays, intergenerational equity, and precaution),
until this decision CBDRs had remained outside the purview of
environmental law jurisprudence at the national level. The article
examines how the Hague Court used CBDRs to help address two common
barriers to climate liability: causation and the ‘political question’
doctrine. The article argues that the Court was able to find normative
content in a core element of the climate-related CBDRs: the ‘leadership’
role of developed countries in climate action. This core element has
remained remarkably consensual throughout the contested history of CBDRs
in the climate regime – a history that has gained a new chapter with
the signature of the Paris Agreement in December 2015. The article
concludes that Urgenda v. The Netherlands
may serve as a starting point for a more productive and extensive use
of CBDRs in climate litigation, provided litigants make more explicit
use of the persuasive authority of the principle.
Original language | Canadian English |
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Pages (from-to) | 329-351 |
Journal | Transnational Environmental Law |
Volume | 5 |
Issue number | 1 |
Publication status | Published - Jun. 14 2022 |
Keywords
- Urgenda v. The Netherlands
- international environmental law
- IEL
- common but differentiated responsibilities and capabilities
- CBDR
- climate litigation