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Part III - Beyond the Law

Science and Narratives in Rights-Based Climate Litigation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2022

César Rodríguez-Garavito
Affiliation:
New York University

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
Litigating the Climate Emergency
How Human Rights, Courts, and Legal Mobilization Can Bolster Climate Action
, pp. 221 - 302
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

11 Climate Science and Human Rights Using Attribution Science to Frame Government Mitigation and Adaptation Obligations

Michael Burger , Jessica Wentz , and Daniel J. Metzger
11.1 Introduction

Since 2005, dozens of human rights claims have been brought against governments for their failure to adequately mitigate and adapt to the impacts of climate change.Footnote 1 These claims are supported by a growing body of climate change detection and attribution research, which demonstrates that climate change is already occurring, that the harmful impacts are manifest and not merely speculative, and that those impacts can be traced, at least in part, to the government defendant’s policies and conduct.

There are several interrelated streams of attribution research, specifically: (i) climate change attribution, which examines how human activities are affecting the global climate system; (ii) impact attribution, which examines how changes in the global climate system affect other interconnected natural and human systems; (iii) extreme event attribution, which examines how changes in the global climate system affect the frequency, magnitude, and other characteristics of extreme events; and (iv) source attribution, which examines the relative contributions of different sectors, activities, and entities to global climate change.

The current body of research shows that anthropogenic climate change is already having pervasive impacts across the world, and there is a robust body of evidence linking human-induced changes in the climate system to broad trends such as global atmospheric and marine warming, slow-onset impacts like sea level rise, and heat-related extreme events. The confidence in attribution findings tends to be lower when examining trends and changes at a smaller geographic or temporal scale, attributing non-heat extreme events, and attributing specific human injuries to climate change.

We have previously written on how attribution research has been used to support claims of causation, injury, and justiciability across a wide range of different types of litigation.Footnote 2 In this chapter, we discuss how parties in recent human rights cases are using this research to frame government mitigation and adaptation obligations. These cases provide a vehicle for exploring two issues not addressed in our previous work, specifically the role of attribution science in supporting, or defending against, claims based on (i) violations of community rights, as compared with individual rights; and (ii) failures to adapt, as compared with failures to mitigate.

11.2 Protecting Individual and Collective Rights

Most of the human rights proceedings challenging government inaction on climate change have been initiated by groups of individuals and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) seeking to enforce government obligations with respect to individual rights, such as the rights to life, health, and private and family life.Footnote 3 Some of the most recent proceedings deal specifically with the rights of children and women, as individuals in these groups tend to be more vulnerable to and disproportionately affected by climate change.Footnote 4 For example, in Sacchi v. Argentina, sixteen children filed a petition alleging that Argentina, Brazil, France, Germany, and Turkey have violated their rights under the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (“CRC”) by failing to implement adequate climate change mitigation and adaptation measures.Footnote 5

Various proceedings have also been initiated on behalf of communities that are adversely affected by climate change.Footnote 6 These include, for example, a complaint submitted on behalf of five tribes in the United States asking UN Special Rapporteurs to investigate and issue recommendations on the obligations of federal and state governments to address forced displacement as a result of climate change,Footnote 7 a Canadian lawsuit filed by members of an Indigenous group alleging that the Canadian government’s approach to climate change has violated their constitutional and human rights,Footnote 8 and a lawsuit initiated by a French municipality against the French government for its failure to take meaningful action on climate change.Footnote 9 While all three proceedings deal with community-level impacts and the obligations of governments with respect to communities, the petition to the UN Special Rapporteurs specifically alleges violations of collective rights of Indigenous communities – specifically those laid out in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, the UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement, the Pinheiro Principles, and the Peninsula Principles.Footnote 10 In particular, that petition alleges violations of the tribes’ collective rights to self-determination, cultural heritage, subsistence and food security, safe drinking water, physical and mental health, and an adequate standard of living.Footnote 11

One potential advantage of community petitions – particularly those based on collective rights – is that it may be easier to prove that climate change is causing damage at the community scale as compared with the individual scale. This is because evidence of attribution tends to be more robust when looking at impacts on a broader geographic and temporal scale, for example, when looking at impacts on Indigenous land holdings and natural resources. Moreover, for extreme events, attribution research has shown that climate change increases the frequency and/or severity of many types of events, but the research is not always able to draw firm conclusions as to whether climate change caused or contributed to a specific event. When dealing with event frequencies and probabilities, the bigger the area and longer the time frame, the larger the climate signal. And when dealing with impacts, the greater the number of people impacted, the easier it is to establish a causal connection to the events.

For example, the IPCC has expressed high- and medium-confidence in research linking climate change to increases in the frequency and severity of wildfires in certain regions,Footnote 12 and recent studies have been able to quantify the impacts of climate change on the 2017 wildfire season in CanadaFootnote 13 and the 2019/2020 wildfire season in Australia.Footnote 14 It is arguably more difficult to ascertain the effects of climate change on the characteristics of a specific wildfire and individual harm arising from that fire – there are many confounding factors, such as fire suppression and fuel loading, which complicate the causation analysis at this level of granularity.Footnote 15 Thus, an individual claimant may have a tougher time proving that personal injury from a fire, such as loss of property or life, can be attributed to climate change (i.e., that it would not have occurred in the absence of anthropogenic influence on climate). However, an Indigenous community could more readily prove that its collective rights to self-determination and “the conservation and protection of the environment and the productive capacity of their lands or territories and resources”Footnote 16 have been adversely affected by a regional increase in wildfire frequency and/or severity over time.

There are ways to overcome downscaling challenges in proceedings that involve individual rights. Many jurisdictions allow NGOs to file petitions on behalf of the public interest or large groups of individuals; and in such proceedings, it is generally sufficient to show that there is actual harm or a genuine threat of harm to the group as a whole without proving harm to any specific individual. For example, in Urgenda v. Netherlands, a case brought by the NGO Urgenda on behalf of Dutch citizens, the Dutch Supreme Court found sufficient evidence of harm where it was “clearly plausible that the current generation of Dutch nationals, in particular but not limited to the younger individuals in this group, will have to deal with the adverse effects of climate change in their lifetime if global emissions of greenhouse gases are not adequately reduced.”Footnote 17 Petitioners can thus rely on the statistical probability of harm across broad segments of the population to support their claims in such cases.Footnote 18

For proceedings brought on behalf of smaller groups of named individuals, such as the CRC petition, it may be necessary to show that one or more of the named petitioners is harmed or at imminent risk of harm as a result of climate change. The CRC petition focuses on the general impacts of climate change on children, but it also discusses the specific experiences of named petitioners with respect to (i) extreme events such as floods, windstorms, wildfires, heat waves, and droughts; (ii) impacts on “the subsistence way of life” for children from Indigenous tribes; and (iii) increased exposure to diseases such as malaria and dengue fever.Footnote 19 This case is similar to that of Juliana v. United States, where youth plaintiffs alleged that the US government violated their constitutional rights by failing to take adequate action on climate change, citing impacts such as lost income on a family farm, lost income at a ski resort, and asthma attacks from the increased frequency of forest fires.Footnote 20 The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals found that the alleged harms were sufficiently concrete and particularized to survive summary judgment, but it dismissed the case on other grounds, and so there was no decision on the adequacy of the evidence presented to support these claims.Footnote 21

The government respondents in the CRC proceeding have argued that the petitioners only alleged generalized harms and failed to substantiate their claims of individual injury.Footnote 22 (Similar arguments were made by the government defendants in Juliana.) This raises an important question about whether and under what circumstances claimants can draw reasonable inferences about individual harm based on regional or community-level impacts. Arguably, such inferences would be more credible where (i) the impact on the individual cannot be fully explained by other factors, and (ii) there are no other tools or data available that would provide stronger proof of the causal nexus between the regional/community-scale impact and individual harm. Consider a petitioner who alleges that her asthma has been exacerbated by the increase in wildfire smoke caused by climate change: she could submit medical documentation of her asthma diagnosis and evidence that wildfires are more frequent due to climate change and then infer that her asthma is (or will be) exacerbated by the wildfire smoke. But her argument would be strengthened if she also submitted medical documentation showing that her asthma was, in fact, exacerbated at the time of the wildfires. Granted, this level of proof is not required in all cases: legal standards and evidentiary requirements will vary depending on the tribunal and claims raised, and it may be unnecessary to prove individual harm with such precision in rights-based cases, particularly those involving communities and the public at large.

Ultimately, there are other factors that may have a greater influence on the evidentiary strength of claims than the question of whether plaintiffs are seeking to defend collective or individual rights. For example, the nature of the alleged injuries is important: an individual that is forced to leave their home due to a long-term trend in sea level rise could potentially establish a more robust causal connection between their injuries and climate change than a community that experienced losses due to a single extreme event. Attribution research is also constantly evolving, particularly with regards to advances in extreme event and impact attribution, and this will likely give greater confidence to statements about attribution of individual harm in future years. Nonetheless, even at this time, many impacts at both the community and individual levels can be attributed to climate change with high confidence, and fairly robust claims can be made about the statistical probability of harm across large groups, broader geographic areas, and longer time frames.Footnote 23

11.3 Addressing Mitigation and Adaptation Obligations

There are at least two types of government obligations that may be the focus of a human rights petition: (i) the obligation to mitigate GHG emissions and other contributions to climate change and (ii) the obligation to adapt to the impacts of climate change.Footnote 24 Almost all of the human rights petitions filed to date have cited government failures to mitigate emissions as the primary basis for legal action.Footnote 25 Some of these petitions include allegations of inadequate adaptation measures putting people at risk of harm, but these allegations are typically a small part of the overall case. There are a few petitions where adaptation obligations have featured more prominently alongside mitigation obligations or where they were the sole basis for the legal claim.Footnote 26 The US tribal petition to the UN Special Rapporteurs is an example of the latter, as it deals exclusively with the obligations of government actors to address the effects of climate-forced displacement on tribes residing on the coastlines of Louisiana and Alaska.Footnote 27

Both types of claims fall under the same human rights instruments and therefore share common legal elements: petitioners must show that the government has a legal obligation to protect human rights and that it has breached this obligation by undertaking a course of action (or inaction) that has interfered and/or foreseeably will interfere with the petitioners’ fundamental rights. Thus, similar to a tort claim, petitioners must prove the existence of the obligation, a breach, an actual or prospective injury, and causation.Footnote 28 However, the evidence required to support these elements differs considerably depending on which obligation is at stake.Footnote 29

11.3.1 Failures to Mitigate

For a failure-to-mitigate claim, petitioners must show that they have been injured or are at imminent risk of injury due to the impacts of climate change and that the defendant (typically a government actor)Footnote 30 contributed to that injury because it failed to control GHG emissions at adequate levels or regulate other activities that cause climate change (e.g., deforestation). Such claims implicate the full scope of attribution science:

  • Climate change attribution research provides the foundation for these petitions, as it establishes the link between human activities and changes in the earth’s climate system.

  • Impact and extreme event attribution research establishes the link between petitioner’s injury and global climate change.

  • Source attribution research establishes the link between the defendant’s conduct and global climate change.

The primary role of attribution science in failure-to-mitigate claims involving government defendants is therefore to establish a causal chain between government conduct and observed impacts of climate change. However, attribution research can also be used in conjunction with forward-looking climate models and projections to strengthen arguments about the likelihood or foreseeability of future harm.

Petitioners have had some success with these types of claims: to date, there have been three major decisions – in the Netherlands, Pakistan, and Colombia – finding that governments violated human rights by failing to undertake adequate measures for the control of GHG emissions at a national scale.Footnote 31 But there are also rights-based petitions that have been dismissed, primarily as a result of concerns about separation of powers and judicial overreach.Footnote 32 For some cases that were dismissed due to lack of standing, tribunals questioned the evidentiary basis of claims – for example, finding that petitioners could not establish an adequate causal nexus between the government conduct and harm where there were so many other sources that contributed to climate change – but these decisions were issued prior to a full evidentiary trial and were based on legal principles rather than judicial review of scientific evidence.Footnote 33 In fact, despite the dismissals, there is growing evidence of a “judicial consensus on climate science” in which “vast judicial agreement exists on the causes, extent, urgency, and consequences of climate change.”Footnote 34

Even with that consensus, petitioners will have to establish government responsibility for climate-related injuries in each case. Source attribution, in particular, may prove complicated. In a failure-to-mitigate case, petitioners must show that government policies are contributing to climate change (e.g., through direct emissions, fossil fuel exports, deforestation, or failure to adequately engage in international climate negotiations) and that this contribution is unreasonable in light of current knowledge on climate change.Footnote 35 Whether government conduct is “unreasonable” may depend on the historical and projected emissions impact that can be attributed to government policies, whether current policies will generate emission reductions in line with international and/or scientific consensus at the pace at which emissions must be reduced to avert catastrophic climate change (i.e., global and national carbon budgets), whether the government is adhering to international or domestic mitigation commitments, and whether the government is using “all available measures to stop the climate crises.”Footnote 36

This raises several questions for parties and tribunals: (i) how does one calculate the emissions attributable to government conduct; (ii) is it reasonable to conclude that any emissions contribution will contribute to human rights violations arising from climate change impacts, or do emissions need to cross some threshold of materiality in order to be linked to impacts;Footnote 37 and (iii) how does one ascertain whether the contribution is unreasonable? Source attribution research provides data to help answer these questions – for example, by estimating national emission contributions based on different types of accounting methodologiesFootnote 38 – but the research cannot provide a definitive answer to normative questions, such as which accounting methodologies are appropriate for use in legal proceedings and what constitutes a “material” or “unreasonable” contribution.Footnote 39

Source attribution research can also cut both ways, potentially supporting defendants’ claims. Most government defendants can point to the fact that emissions attributable to their policies are relatively small in comparison to overall global emissions or the contributions of countries like China and the United States. However, even contributions that appear small when presented as a proportion of global emissions (e.g., 1 percent of global emissions) can nonetheless have a substantial impact on human rights due to the breadth and magnitude of climate change impacts.Footnote 40

Existing case law and interpretations of human rights law also indicate that governments have an obligation to mitigate their contributions to climate change regardless of whether other actors are contributing to the problem. As noted by the petitioners in the CRC proceeding, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) has explicitly rejected the “others do it too” defense, and the International Law Commission (ILC) has issued guidance clarifying that, where multiple states have contributed to an environmental harm, “the responsibility of each participating State is determined individually, on the basis of its own conduct and by reference to its own international obligations.”Footnote 41

11.3.2 Failures to Adapt

For a failure-to-adapt claim, petitioners must show that they have suffered or will suffer injury due to events that are foreseeable in light of climate change and climate variability and that the government either (i) failed to take reasonable measures to protect petitioners’ rights in the face of foreseeable risks (breach of an affirmative obligation) or (ii) undertook a course of action that exacerbated the risks, for example, by increasing the magnitude of harmful impacts or increasing exposure to risk (breach of a negative obligation).Footnote 42

In some cases, petitioners may raise both types of claims. For example, the US tribal petition to the UN Special Rapporteurs alleges that the US government and the state governments of Louisiana and Alaska violated the collective and individual rights of Indigenous tribes by (i) undertaking maladaptive activities that contributed to coastal erosion, land loss, and flooding along the coastlines where the tribes reside, thus exacerbating the effects of sea level rise and extreme storms; and (ii) failing to take affirmative measures to protect the tribes from sea level rise, extreme storms, and land loss and, in particular, failing to implement a “relocation governance framework” for these tribes.Footnote 43 Because petitioners do not need to prove that the government defendant caused or contributed to climate change in a failure-to-adapt case, the causation analysis is quite different from that in failure-to-mitigate cases. Petitioners need not grapple with questions about source attribution or related defenses. Instead, the focus is on the reasonableness of the government’s response to climate change (or lack thereof), which is based, at least in part, on the foreseeability of climate impacts.Footnote 44

The causation analysis also differs in failure-to-adapt claims because petitioners do not need to prove that the specific event or impact giving rise to their injury was actually caused by climate change. It should be sufficient to show that the type of impact or event was or is a foreseeable consequence of climate change.Footnote 45

While the causation analysis in failure-to-adapt cases is somewhat simplified, source attribution research may still factor into these cases as a defense. Specifically, defendants may argue that human activities giving rise to climate change are the proximate cause of the injury and that a government cannot be held liable for failing to prevent harm caused by others. However, as discussed below, human rights case law suggests that government defendants have obligations to prevent known risks associated with both natural and man-made disasters, and so the fact that other parties are also responsible for creating hazards that interfere with human rights does not relieve governments of their obligations to take reasonable measures to address that interference.

There is some precedent for failure-to-adapt claims in human rights case law. The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) has issued several decisions that provide some insight on the nature of a state’s positive obligation to protect the right to life in the context of natural disasters. In Budayeva and Others v. Russia, the ECtHR determined that Russian authorities had violated the right to life when those authorities knew that there was a risk of a mudslide but did not implement land planning and emergency relief policies or adequately inform the public about the risk, and eight citizens died as a result of the mudslide.Footnote 46 Similarly, in Kolyadenko v. Russia, the ECtHR determined that Russian authorities violated the rights to life, respect for private and family life, and protection of property when they released a large amount of water from a reservoir during an exceptionally heavy rain event, thus causing a flash flood immediately downstream of the reservoir.Footnote 47 Notably, the court did not find that authorities were negligent in their operation of the dam at the time of the flood – rather, the problem was that the government authorities (i) knew for many years that such an event was foreseeable and failed to take action to mitigate the risk, (ii) failed to adopt planning restrictions and take other necessary steps to protect people living downstream of the reservoir, and (iii) did not take all possible measures to alert residents of the risks prior to or during the storm.

There are also a number of human rights decisions affirming that governments have a positive obligation to protect citizens from other environmental hazards that threaten human rights, including wholly man-made hazards. For example, in Öneryildiz v. Turkey, the ECtHR found that the government of Turkey had violated the rights to life and property arising from a methane explosion at a landfill when governmental authorities knew of the risk of explosion but failed to issue any regulations or take measures to mitigate that risk.Footnote 48

These ECtHR decisions show that human rights law imposes positive obligations on governments to mitigate risks as well as negative obligations not to infringe upon human rights.

There are also now two decisions in Colombia and Pakistan in which courts have found that governments have an obligation to undertake adaptation measures in order to protect fundamental human rights, such as the rights to life and environmental welfare.Footnote 49 In addition, the Inter-American Court on Human Rights (IACHR) has held that governments have a positive obligation to prevent foreseeable environmental harms arising from their conduct, which could provide a basis for relief where governments undertake maladaptive measures that increase environmental risks associated with climate change.Footnote 50 Thus, although the overall body of case law on adaptation obligations and human rights is relatively small, there is reason to be optimistic about the justiciability and outcomes of future cases.

One common element in the ECtHR disaster cases was that the human rights violations were rooted in governmental failures to address foreseeable risks. The governments were aware (or should have been aware) of the likelihood of the disaster occurring as well as the likelihood that people would be exposed to harm as a result of the disaster. Thus, in the failure-to-adapt context, petitioners may need to show that both the climate event and the resulting injury were foreseeable. One potential complication here is that there may be contexts in which unforeseeable injuries arise from foreseeable climate impacts due to confounding factors. The tribal petition addresses confounding factors by characterizing the unlawful government conduct broadly, as encompassing both federal and state maladaptive planning decisions (e.g., those pertaining to oil and gas development on coastlines) and failures to take affirmative adaptation measures.Footnote 51

Such questions about the foreseeability of past injury will not feature prominently in all adaptation cases. Where petitioners are primarily challenging the inadequacy of national adaptation policies and seeking improvement to or implementation of those policies as the primary remedy, it is unnecessary for a tribunal to determine whether a particular climate-related risk was foreseeable to the government based on information that was available at some point in the past. Rather, the relevant inquiry is whether future harm is likely to occur as a result of the policy failure – a question that relates primarily to the causation and injury analysis.

In sum: attribution research is relevant to failure-to-adapt claims insofar as it can be used to evaluate (i) whether the impacts of climate change pose a “reasonably foreseeable” risk to human rights, necessitating a proactive government response to safeguard those rights; and (ii) whether prior government actions, such as decisions about coastal planning or flood management, were maladaptive because they failed to account for this reasonably foreseeable risk. However, attribution research likely will not feature as prominently in these cases as in failure-to-mitigate cases due to the greater focus on source attribution and contributions to climate change as the basis of government responsibility. Also, in failure-to-adapt cases involving governments’ positive obligations to plan for future climate impacts, forward-looking climate projections may play a bigger role in establishing the foreseeability of harm.

11.4 Conclusion

Attribution research plays an integral role in the development and interpretation of legal claims involving human rights, government obligations, and climate change. As detailed in this chapter, the overall body of research is already fairly robust and capable of supporting claims brought on behalf of both communities and individuals, as well as claims related to both mitigation and adaptation obligations. There are still gaps and limitations in the research, but it does not appear that scientific constraints have posed or will pose a major impediment to rights-based litigation. The body of case law is still relatively small, and many petitions are currently underway. Scientific debates may factor more prominently in future trials, particularly those involving the rights of small groups of individuals as opposed to communities or the public interest at large, and novel scientific questions may arise in both the failure-to-mitigate and failure-to-adapt contexts. At the same time, the scope of the research is expanding, and the techniques used are being refined. We can expect that the evidentiary basis for rights-based climate litigation will become increasingly robust in the years to come.

12 The Evolution of Corporate Accountability for Climate Change

Richard Heede

From now on we will not be asking you to trust us. We will be showing that you can. And ultimately you will judge.

BP CEO Bernard Looney, February 2020.Footnote 1

If you want to be a long-term relevant company that is on the right side of history, you have to be involved in this discussion, because it’s the most important discussion of our time.” Shell’s pace of change “will be linked to the pace of change in society.”

Ben van Beurden, October 2018.Footnote 2

He who can but does not prevent, sins.

Antoine Loysel, 1607.

This chapter traces the evolution of thought on who is responsible for the climate crisis from the early science of the nineteenth century to today’s Paris Agreement to oil and gas companies’ commitments to reducing the carbon intensity of their supply chains. I discuss the science of attributing the lion’s share of historical carbon dioxide emissions since 1750 to individual oil, gas, coal, and cement companies; the industry’s climate denial, obfuscation, and greenwashing; and the emergence of litigation holding fossil fuel companies accountable for climate damages. I conclude that fossil fuel companies bear substantial responsibility for the severity of the climate crisis and the decades-long delay in effective action by nations, consumers, commerce, industry, and, most of all, by oil, natural gas, and coal producers themselves to decarbonize at the scale and speed now required to avert dangerous interference with the climate system.

12.1 Introduction

The science of climate change grew primarily out of two strands of thought: one, the search for the mechanisms for the observed climate swings, sea level changes, stratigraphy, evolution of life, geologic history of the earth, and glaciations that were coming to light in the 1800s and two, the science of atmospheric physics, the behavior of gases, and the relationship between the atmosphere and the weathering of rocks.

The radiative properties of carbon dioxide (CO2) were discovered by Eunice Foote in 1856, advanced by John Tyndall,Footnote 3 and studied by Svante Arrhenius in the 1890s.Footnote 4 Arrhenius, despite his careful work on calculating the atmospheric sensitivity of carbon dioxide, thought that fossil fuels (predominantly coal in the 1890s) had a minor role in CO2 variability. He dismissed the idea that future fossil fuel use could double the atmospheric CO2 content: there simply weren’t enough recoverable carbon fuels in the world at the time, and that level of production and consumption was, in his day, unthinkable.

The science emerging in the 1900s on the importance of CO2 was dismissed by the Royal Meteorological Society as having “no appreciable effect on the climate” – foreshadowing disbelief (still alive among climate denialists) that human activities could have any appreciable impacts on Mother Nature – but later confirmed by Guy Callendar in the 1930s.Footnote 5 Confirmation of the predominant role of human emission sources came later.

With respect to the causes of human-caused climate change, this chapter is primarily concerned with the sources of warming and the behavior of greenhouse gases, chiefly carbon dioxide and methane associated with fossil fuel combustion, and secondarily with humanity’s impacts on the natural carbon cycle through, for example, deforestation, permafrost melting, ice loss, and albedo changes.

Early measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide were sporadic and regional. Reliable global monitoring began in 1958 with Charles Keeling’s continuous readings at the Mauna Loa volcano in Hawai’i.Footnote 6 The iconic “Keeling Curve” is one of the most significant scientific accomplishments of the twentieth century, and it helped raise scientific awareness of rising CO2 concentrations, human impacts on the Earth’s atmosphere, and the sensitivity of global temperatures to minor perturbations in the atmospheric concentration of CO2. While CO2 concentrations are low (0.04 percent of the atmosphere), the gas is the chief regulator of global temperatures and, once perturbed, is potent enough to awaken an “angry beast.”Footnote 7

12.2 Sources of Greenhouse Gases

These “minor” perturbations in CO2 concentration have involved large-scale mobilizations of resources, investment of trillions of dollars, the extraction and combustion of approximately 580 billion tons of fossil fuels since the mid-1700s, and trillion-ton terraforming visible from space for infrastructure, mining, and material movement. Cement production and energy-related carbon dioxide and methane comprise 72 percent of global anthropogenic emissions. Other sources include CO2 from land use and deforestation (approximately 11 percent); methane from animal husbandry, agriculture, and decomposition of organic wastes (approximately 9 percent); nitrous oxide (approximately 6 percent); and fluorinated compounds (approximately 2 percent).

Now we know that the future Arrhenius couldn’t fathom has come to pass: global fossil fuel production in the mid-1890s generated emissions of 1,535 million tons of carbon dioxide (MtCO2), which by 2018 had risen twenty-two-fold to 33,730 MtCO2.Footnote 8 Such an explosive expansion of fossil fuel production brought unparalleled prosperity, allowed the global population to grow by 480 percent, and ultimately led per capita carbon emissions to rise from 0.95 tCO2 in 1896 to 4.5 tCO2 in 2018. This expansion of energy use vastly improved our access to basic necessities such as shelter, food, sanitation, and well-being. But it also perpetuated economic and racial inequality, environmental injustice, poverty, hunger, disease, and fossil fuel racism,Footnote 9 among a host of other problems (see Figure 12.1).

Figure 12.1 Global CO2 emissions from fossil fuel use, cement production, and flaring, 1890

In the early carbon age, there was little concern for the environmental, societal, or climatic impacts of fossil fuel production and use. It wasn’t until the 1950s that global industrialization and environmental change began to be recognized as imperiling humanity’s prospects; Harrison Brown’s The Challenge of Man’s Future in 1954 and, later, Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring (1962) and Club of Rome’s Limits to Growth (1972) shed light on the clash between unrestrained growth and the planet’s ability to sustainably provide food and materials without threatening the web of life on which humans depend. These concerns, which gained prominence in the 1960s, and the awareness of the dangers of unfettered industrialization led to the Earth Day demonstrations of 1970 and emboldened President Nixon and Congress to pass environmental legislation and create the Environmental Protection Agency.

As Morris Udall (US Congressman from New Mexico) said in 1974, “farsighted scientists, businessmen, economists, and public servants are beginning to realize that there is a better, safer way than blind, unlimited growth. And that is to limit growth now before the problem reaches crisis proportion.”Footnote 10 Udall was speaking of US oil reserves and potential new discoveries and pointing out that exponential growth made the scale of our reserves irrelevant in the long run, chiefly because environmental impacts would limit growth. Indeed, fossil fuel reserves have far exceeded safe climate limits for decades.Footnote 11

With respect to the threat of climate change, the scientific community as well as the petroleum industry began to issue early warnings in the 1950s. In 1959, Columbia University and the American Petroleum Institute (API) convened a meeting organized for the centennial of Edwin Drake’s discovery of oil at Titusville, Pennsylvania in 1859. Physicist Edward Teller, best known for his role in the Manhattan Project and an “out of the box” thinker on the civilian use of atomic devices for energy production, was asked to comment on “energy patterns of the future.” He warned the audience of 300 leading academics and oil industry executives that fossil fuels “contaminate the atmosphere” and that “when the temperature does rise by a few degrees over the whole globe, there is a possibility that the icecaps will start melting and the level of the oceans will begin to rise.”Footnote 12 That seed of recognition of the consequences of fossil fuel use – that their continued use would threaten the viability of companies engaged in the production and distribution of carbon fuels – was thus planted decades ago.

Oil and gas company scientists and trade associations also researched the effects of carbon dioxide emissions and carbon uptake by the oceans. Company executives were duly warned that the continued use of fossil fuels would destabilize the global climate and pose an existential threat to fossil fuel producers. US and international Academies of Science weighed in with commissions and reports studying the severity of the threat of global warming, including, notably, the Charney report (1979), which were preceded and followed by scientific investigations, a warning to Congress by President Johnson’s Science Advisory Committee, academic studies, international commissions, and so on.Footnote 13 (This is a bare summary; interested readers can follow the thread here.)Footnote 14

As the science on the climate threat became incontrovertible, the world responded with the creation of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in 1988. Scientist Jim Hansen’s riveting testimony before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee in June 1988, cleverly timed by Senator Tim Wirth to coincide with a heat wave and conducted with the hearing room’s cooling system turned off, finally brought the issue to public attention.Footnote 15

12.3 International Climate Negotiations in Response to Global Warming

As diplomats are wont to do with a global problem, an international effort to address climate change was launched in the late 1980s/early 1990s with climate negotiators, analysts, and scientists from most of the world’s 196 nations, pursuant to the objectives of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC 1992) and focused on the responsibilities and obligations of national governments. This focus on controlling territorial consumption and emissions ignores the world’s pan-national carbon producers, discussed below.Footnote 16

The Framework Convention defines responsibility for climate change and the burden of mitigating the climate crisis “on the basis of equity and in accordance with their common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities. Accordingly, the developed country Parties should take the lead in combating climate change and the adverse effects thereof.”Footnote 17 Responsibilities for ameliorating climate harms are thus chiefly accorded to the parties that benefited the most from historical fossil fuel use and emissions. The Framework Convention eventually led to the development of the 2015 Paris Agreement at the twenty-first meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP). Signatories to the Paris Agreement agreed to submit plans for their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), which would contain commitments to reduce national emissions in accordance with the global commitment to limit the global temperature increase to two degrees Celsius, and, if feasible, “well below” two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial surface temperature by mid-century.

This global initiative, along with the IPCC’s Assessment ReportsFootnote 18 and Special Report on 1.5°C,Footnote 19 are crucial to making progress on reducing still-increasing global emissions toward net zero by 2050, without significant overshoot.

Other analysts have pointed out that nations should take responsibility for consumption-based emissions that occur in countries from which they import goods, services, and energy commodities (whose operational emissions are attributed to the producer nation).Footnote 20 International agreements, while crucial, have thus far failed to curb emissions (it took a pandemic to peak emissions, if the downturn is sustainable).Footnote 21 The “emissions gap” remains wide, and NDC commitments are falling short of what is required to fulfil the objectives of the Paris Agreement.Footnote 22

Can consumers, companies, or state and local governments fill the gap where nations fail?

12.4 Non-State Actors and ResponsibilityFootnote 23

The concept of responsibility includes private parties as well as national governments.Footnote 24 Consumers have pursued emission reductions, cutting their consumption of carbon fuels and fossil-based electricity. Electric utilities, airlines, and large companies generate significant emissions of carbon dioxide, and most large public companies measure and report operational emissions using corporate inventory protocols.Footnote 25 Most Fortune 500 companies and thousands of mid-sized companies report direct and indirect operational emissions to platforms such as CDP and the Global Reporting Initiative, and most publish corporate sustainability reports. Nearly one thousand companies have committed to meet or exceed the Paris Agreement’s “well-below 2°C” target and “to pursue efforts to limit warming to 1.5°C.”Footnote 26 Thousands of cities have also committed to climate action. Yet emissions keep rising.Footnote 27

The emphasis in the greenhouse gas protocol is to report on and thereby acknowledge a degree of responsibility for direct and indirect operational emissions (scope 1 and scope 2, respectively). For fossil fuel companies, in particular, emissions from oil, gas, and coal products sold to and emitted by their worldwide customers (scope 3) are reported voluntarily and, hence, without a commensurate sense of responsibility. Since their carbon fuel products are their largest source of attributed emissions, this, too, is changing, and fossil fuel companies are taking notice.

Corporations have stepped up their game in recent years,Footnote 28 pushed by the urgency of the IPPC’s “1.5°C Report,” the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures, the keen interest of investors, the potential stranding of billion-dollar reserves, divestment campaigns, campaigns to keep carbon in the ground, virulent demonstrations, and the emergence of Greta Thunberg as humanity’s climate conscience.

The fiduciary responsibility of corporations – previously limited to maximizing financial returns to shareholders – has been broadened by Business Roundtable’s “Statement on the Purpose of a Corporation,” investors such as BlackRock urging the full disclosure of climate-related risks and holding directors to account, the requirements of the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures, the divestment decisions of Norway’s Sovereign Wealth Fund, corporate reputational concerns, the need to preserve their social license to operate, and the threat of climate litigation, just to name a few of the motivating developments that have helped raise the pressure on oil and gas companies to align with the Paris Agreement.

Other companies, including electric utilities, have stepped up their ambition. What about the fossil fuel companies at the base of the global supply chain for carbon fuels? What responsibilities do they have?

12.5 The Responsibility of Fossil Fuel Producers

By the mid-2010s, there was little choice for fossil fuel producers but to acknowledge their fundamental responsibilities for the impacts of their carbon fuels and the need to address the climate crisis largely caused by their products. Indeed, BP and Shell acknowledged as much in the 1990s.Footnote 29 (American companies, in contrast, invested millions of dollars to disinform Congress and the publicFootnote 30 in order to delay action to curb production.) Whether any oil and gas company is fully prepared for the decarbonization of the world’s energy economy remains to be seen, but Eni, TotalEnergies, BP, Shell, Repsol, Galp, and Equinor have made substantial commitments, in alignment with the Paris Agreement, to reduce operational and product-related emissions by mid-century.Footnote 31 Whether leading companies can be trusted to drive decarbonization remains to be seen.Footnote 32

Fossil fuel companies extract, refine, and market the carbon fuels that, when used as intended, contribute the largest share (87 percent of all CO2 from fuels, cement, and land use, and 62 percent overall) of all greenhouse gas emissions that drive atmospheric warming and climate change. Seven-eighths of emissions attributed to carbon producers result from the use of their products – gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, natural gas, and coal – and one-eighth from the extraction, refinement, and delivery of finished fuels.

Oil, natural gas, and coal companies have benefited for decades from hundreds of billions of dollars in government subsidies for fossil fuel development, as well as regulatory preferences such as lax pollution controls, favorable leasing terms for resource extraction on public lands, other taxpayer-funded costs, such as naval protection for shipping lanes, and health costs of energy-related pollution.Footnote 33 Fossil fuel companies are the beneficiaries of what economist Nicholas Stern has called the “greatest market failure the world has seen,” whereby the profits have been privatized and the costs and damages have been externalized.

Fossil fuel and cement producers had early knowledge that their products would destabilize the climate and thus bear a moral responsibility to address the impacts caused by the use of their products. Rather than taking action to ameliorate the harms, these companies have continued to invest in additional reserves and production, funded campaigns to disinform the public in order to delay legislative action, and sought to perpetuate the carbon economy — as if the consequences didn’t matter.Footnote 34

12.6 The Carbon Majors Project: Attributing Emissions

On the theory that fossil fuel producers bear substantial responsibility for the adverse impacts of their products,Footnote 35 the Climate Accountability InstituteFootnote 36 began, in 2004, to investigate how much the largest oil, gas, and coal companies have contributed to global CO2 and methane emissions and thus to climate change. An extensive database of each company’s historical fossil fuel production was created, using company-declared production data, and a methodology to quantify atmospheric emissions was documented and peer-reviewed. The project quantified both direct operational emissions (scope 1) and product-related emissions (scope 3) from each entity’s annual fossil fuel production, deducting for net non-energy uses such as petrochemicals, road oil, and lubricants. Initial results were published in 2014.Footnote 37 Results were then updated to 2017 when published in The Guardian and updated to include 2020 production data in Table 12.1.Footnote 38

We found that the top twenty companies collectively produced the fuels that when used as intended dumped 493 billion tons of CO2 and methane (GtCO2e) into the atmosphere from 1965 to 2020, or 35 percent of all global fossil fuel emissions in that period (1.49 trillion tCO2e, TtCO2e). Table 12.1 shows company emissions as a percent of global fossil fuel and cement emissions over the same period.

Table 12.1 Operational and product emissions attributed to the top twenty major carbon producers, 1965–2020

EntityMtCO2ea% of global
1.Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabia64,8254.35%
2.Gazprom, Russia47,7473.20%
3.Chevron, USA44,7153.00%
4.ExxonMobil, USA43,6492.93%
5.National Iranian Oil Co.39,1682.63%
6.BP, UK35,6462.39%
7.Shell, UK33,5562.25%
8.Coal India, India26,7371.79%
9.Pemex, Mexico23,7311.59%
10.PetroChina / China Natl Petroleum16,7831.13%
11.Peabody Energy, USA16,4251.10%
12.Petroleos de Venezuela16,3451.10%
13.Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates15,9671.07%
14.ConocoPhillips, USA15,7941.06%
15.Kuwait Petroleum Corp., Kuwait14,8130.99%
16.Iraq National Oil Co., Iraq14,2190.95%
17.TotalEnergies, France13,6100.91%
18.Sonatrach, Algeria13,5420.91%
19.BHP, Australia10,5540.71%
20.Occidental, USA9,9280.67%
Top Twenty517,74334.73%
Global, 1965–20201,490,872100.00%

a MtCO2e: million tonnes carbon dioxide-equivalent. Percent of global fossil fuel and cement emissions, 1965–2020

The oil, gas, and coal companies, unsurprisingly, take a dim view of our perspective that they bear substantial responsibility for the climate impacts, costs, and damages caused by the use of their products. While they do not challenge the basic findings (the estimates are based primarily on their own production data, after all), their responses range from “we are fulfilling our customers demand for energy” and “we support climate action/we’re reducing our own carbon footprint” to “people in developing countries should be allowed to have the benefits of clean fuels, too.” What else can they say? That carbon fuels are legally sanctioned products and that they invested heavily in lobbying to perpetuate the carbon economy, restrain renewable energy development, and retain market share?

Suffice it to quote from seventeenth century legal scholar, Antoine Loysel: “He who can but does not prevent, sins.”

12.7 The Carbon Majors: Attribution and Legal Implications

Attributing source emissions is the first crucial step in attributing climate impacts. In a co-authored 2017 paper, we modeled the rise in atmospheric CO2 concentration, surface temperature, and sea level attributable to the emissions traced to the leading carbon producers.Footnote 39 In 2019, we modeled the major companies’ impact on the acidification of the world’s oceans and vulnerable fisheries.Footnote 40 These climate models account for non-anthropogenic greenhouse gases as well as emissions from other human sources, such as deforestation, carbon from soils, and non-energy sources of methane (rice cultivation, landfills, and animal husbandry) and nitrous oxide.

There are other ways of attributing climate impacts to major carbon producers. In preliminary research using a simple land inundation model, CAI estimated that of the 10,000 km2 of land lost to sea level rise from 1980 to 2010, nearly 3,700 km2 can be attributed to the twelve largest carbon producers. The largest land loss (approximately 600 km2) is attributed to Saudi Aramco; ExxonMobil’s attributed land loss is approximately 380 km2.Footnote 41 Most of this coastal inundation is in remote, sparsely populated areas, but the preponderance of economic damages are to low-lying buildings, industry, and infrastructure. We have not (yet) calculated the economic losses attributable to carbon producers (see Figure 12.2).

Figure 12.2 The arc of CAI’s work from attributing emissions to carbon producers, modeling their impact on the global climate, and contributing to efforts to hold companies accountable for climate damages

It is far more challenging to link the emissions traced to individual fossil fuel producers to anthropogenic climate damages.Footnote 42 It is not simply a proportional exercise in which each oil, gas, and coal company’s historical emissions (e.g., Chevron’s 3.0 percent of global CO2 and CH4 emissions since 1965) are used to allocate adaption costs or reparations (such as to an Atmospheric Recovery Trust Fund)Footnote 43 to fossil fuel companies. As discussed above, other parties contribute to emissions and thus bear some responsibility for climate change, including individual consumers (both living and dead)Footnote 44 as well as nations, airlines, corporations, and electric utilities, to name a few. Fossil fuel emissions are the major, but not the sole, contributor to anthropogenic climate change; deforestation, animal husbandry,Footnote 45 agriculture, soil loss, desertification, the thermal impacts of our cities and highways, and even albedo changes must be accounted for in considering how to allocate damages among contributing parties, whether defendants or not.

As a first step toward allocating climate damages to carbon producers, we analyze estimated global GDP losses from anthropogenic climate damages out to 2050 totaling $99 trillion and allocate climate reparations of $5.5 trillion to the twenty largest oil, gas, and coal producers based on their atmospheric CO2 and methane contributions from 1988 to 2018, after accounting for non-energy contributions, other gases, and other responsible parties.Footnote 46

These results are of interest to climate litigators, Loss & Damage proponents, human rights commissions, financial analysts, insurers and lenders, shareholders, regulators, scientists, and fossil fuel company executives and boards. CAI’s work is cited in several climate lawsuits against major carbon producers in the United States and internationally, as well in human rights investigations.Footnote 47 The science of detection and attribution is improving rapidly,Footnote 48 and we can with increasing confidence link emissions to higher degrees of risk and higher incidences and degrees of damages. In other words, we can better link emissions to human interference with the climate system – the human fingerprint on rising climate damages.Footnote 49 For more on attribution science and climate litigation, see Michael Burger, Jessica Wentz, and Daniel Metzger’s chapter in this volume (Chapter 11).

Fundamentally, however, fossil fuel producers have failed to “clean up their mess” and are morally obliged to limit future emissions and impacts in line with the science. As Henry Shue puts it:Footnote 50

Obviously, this responsibility to future generations does not fall on carbon producers any more than it does on anyone else. But it also does not fall on them any less. And more than most of us they have the political influence, the wealth, and the technical expertise to go beyond avoiding future harm and compensating for past harm and to make positive contributions to the creation of an energy regime that will be safe for people to live with. The time has come for the major carbon producers to face the reality of the unsafe products they persist in marketing and the safer world they could help to create. Otherwise, they risk turning themselves into enemies of humanity.

12.8 Conclusion

Some entities are more responsible than others, and it is my contention that oil and gas and coal producers bear substantial responsibility, not only for climate damages and adaption costs but also for a moral (and perhaps legal) mandate to accelerate the decarbonization of the global energy economy. Some companies are reacting positively to this challenge: Repsol, the Spanish oil and gas major, committed to net zero emissions by 2050 across its full supply chainFootnote 51 and other majors are moving in that direction, led by BP,Footnote 52 Royal Dutch Shell,Footnote 53 Eni, and Equinor.Footnote 54 Their ambitions, however, may not be sufficient.Footnote 55

The writing is on the wall. Carbon emissions must, if we are to preserve global civilization as we know it, decline rapidly to net zero by mid-century. This requires a massive transformation of the global energy system, the decommissioning of plants, drilling platforms, pipelines, refineries, mines, boilers, vehicles, aircraft – all manner of carbon infrastructure – and the creation and deployment of a new (though less massive) infrastructure to capture, store, transport, and permit the use of emerging renewable energy systems. It also requires the investment of trillions of dollars and the deployment of ingenious, efficient new systems.Footnote 56 This transition should not only be the burden of the nations of the world and their taxpayers but also, in substantial part, the fossil fuel companies that have willfully prolonged this transformation.

In this writer’s view, this transition has been inevitable for decades,Footnote 57 and we have squandered precious time, skirted our responsibilities, and shifted the costs to our children. Major fossil fuel companies understand their role and the existential importance of leading the transition to a low-carbon economy. It is my hope that the companies – and countries – that lead will prosper and that the laggards will get out of the way.

13 Providing Evidence to Support Strategic Climate Enforcement and Litigation

Reinhold Gallmetzer
Footnote *
13.1 Introduction

Courts are critical – but often overlooked – components of the global response to the climate emergency. Courts are crucial because judicial proceedings are particularly apt to address long-term challenges, such as climate change, where the most severe impacts will only be felt by the next generations. Constitutionally guaranteed independence and impartiality releases judges from the pressures of short-term political gain or special interests’ lobbies. At the same time, judgments are legally binding and enforceable. In many instances, addressing climate change through courts is also legally uncontroversial because they focus on violations of existing law, even if applied to different contexts.

To make more and better use of courts to address the climate emergency, a few hurdles need to be overcome. Notwithstanding recent examples of successful strategic climate litigation and law enforcement, laws and regulations that could be used to address some of the key causes of climate change have still not been enforced sufficiently for this purpose. This applies, for instance, to illegal deforestation, the direct and illegal harm caused by the extraction and use of fossil fuels, and to methane emissions from oil and gas, from coal mining and from landfills. Enquiries with prosecution and police authorities suggest that this is mostly because they do not have access to the high quality information and support that would enable them to trigger and conduct effective proceedings with the means available to them. Similarly, the authorities indicated that NGOs not only need to bring more strategic climate litigation cases, but they must also do so based on strong evidence. Judicial climate action – whether enforced through criminal, administrative, constitutional, or civil courts – can only be successful if it is based on relevant and probative evidence. Generally, this evidence must establish that a person (natural or legal) engaged in illegal conduct or caused an illegal harm. The lack of access to high quality information establishing those facts prevents police, prosecutors, and courts from fully exploiting their collective potential to enforce laws capable of addressing the climate emergency.

This problem can be fixed. Recent developments in information and communication technology have created new and unprecedented possibilities for private organizations and individuals to generate, access, verify, and disseminate information. This allows NGOs and private citizens to trigger and support judicial proceedings. In fact, even if they do not have investigative powers like a government authority, they can still employ some information collection and analysis techniques more effectively than government authorities. This is because, collectively, they have more people to carry out such tasks, more immediate and direct access to certain kinds of information, more diverse expertise, and the ability to share relevant information swiftly and across borders without being restricted by jurisdictional limitations or narrow procedural rules. If mobilized in a coordinated and strategic way, NGOs and private citizens can bring stronger and more frequent cases before judicial authorities.

The Center for Climate Crime Analysis (CCCA) – to which the author of this chapter belongs – is a group of prosecutors and law enforcement professionals aiming to harness the collective potential of investigative NGOs and experts to support climate action. By collecting and analyzing all necessary information in collaboration with a broad and diverse network of partners, and by sharing that information with the competent law enforcement authorities or advocacy organizations, CCCA seeks to support and scale up judicial and other advocacy action against illegal activities related to climate change.

The following sections will identify the under-enforcement of laws relevant to discrete sources of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions as the underlying problem; demonstrate how recent developments in information and communication technology (ICT) and related sociological developments enable a proposed solution; show how, through coordinated action, investigative NGOs, expert organizations, and private citizens can effectively support climate relevant law enforcement, litigation, and advocacy action; and illustrate the practical application of the proposed solution on the basis of a case study focusing on illegal deforestation and its drivers.

13.2 The Problem

While most GHG emissions are legal, a significant share results from, or is associated with, conduct that violates existing laws. National law enforcement authorities are therefore already equipped with the necessary statutory authority to effectively address some of the driving causes of climate change. For instance, virtually every country around the world criminalizes or otherwise outlaws, in one way or another, conduct that causes large-scale environmental damage or environmental degradation where it directly impacts the health and the lives of people.

Currently, however, national laws are inadequately enforced in these areas, resulting in a law enforcement gap. This prevents national law enforcement authorities from fully exploiting their vast collective potential to address some of the causes of climate change. While some observers suspect that this gap may be the result of a lack of political will to enforce the law more rigorously, this is not the real reason for the relatively low number of climate relevant cases, especially not in functioning democracies. Instead, the law enforcement gap in climate relevant cases is primarily the result of the following factors.

First, for any form of law enforcement or litigation to be successful, it must be based on credible and reliable evidence through which the allegations can be substantiated to the required standard of proof. No matter how ingenious an applied legal theory may be, legal action will fail unless the underlying facts are proven. In practice, however, the competent authorities often lack access to the high quality information and support that would enable them to conduct effective investigations and proceedings with the means available to them. This is particularly the case where some or all the required information can only be obtained by investigating conduct that occurred abroad. While law enforcement authorities could obtain such information through mutual legal assistance from foreign authorities, the underlying proceedings are often lengthy, cumbersome, and ineffective.

Second, national law enforcement authorities must frequently balance competing priorities with the limited means available to them. This means that ‘hard’ cases or cases based on fact-patterns or legal theories that fall outside the general practices of an authority, even if strategically significant, fail to get the attention they deserve.

And third, there is not enough coordination among national law enforcement authorities to address the illegal causes of climate change. While the authorities of different countries are well coordinated and cooperate effectively in some areas – for instance in combating terrorism or organized crime – no such coordination is apparent in the fight against the illegal causes of climate change.

Efforts by investigative NGOs to trigger law enforcement action in areas such as environmental destruction do not achieve the desired result. This is because the quantity and quality of the information provided by them is often not enough for the law enforcement authorities to overcome the above challenges. Many NGOs conduct investigations with the aim of supporting public advocacy, instead of legal enforcement, which applies strict standards of proof. Their investigations are also often limited to specific facts that do not cover all aspects that need to be established in a legal case. NGOs, further, do not always readily cooperate with each other or share information. However, there is now an opportunity to break this deadlock by making effective use of the collective potential of investigative NGOs and private individuals to generate, preserve, and collect information and to strategically use that information to support climate enforcement and litigation.

13.3 Enabling Technological and Sociological Developments of the Proposed Solution

Recent developments in ICT have created new and unprecedented possibilities for citizens to communicate and to generate, access, verify, and disseminate information. This empowers private citizens and other non-state actors to build legal actions, which can significantly enhance the role of law enforcement in addressing the illegal causes of climate change. The paragraphs below illustrate the relevance of these technological developments for these purposes.

The International Telecommunication Union estimated that, in 2019, about 4.1 billion people used the Internet. The percentage of mobile-broadband subscriptions was particularly high, including in developing countries and in the Least Developed Countries.Footnote 1 This transforms billions of people from passive recipients of information into active participants in a globally interconnected information community. Virtually every person who has access to the Internet can share information and ideas, and every person with a smartphone can preserve information by taking pictures or videos or by communicating through social media or other technological means. Tailor-made, online applications such as WitnessFootnote 2 or the Eye Witness ProjectFootnote 3 assist citizens in preserving information such that it can be used by law enforcement as evidence.

People are also more connected. Not only can they share information and ideas, but they can also coordinate their actions. The experiences of open-source investigation platforms, such as BellingcatFootnote 4 or the Citizen Evidence Lab,Footnote 5 have shown that people are willing to lend their talent, expertise, and free time to participate in investigative projects that they believe are socially beneficial and that are coordinated by a steering body. This form of expert-led social crowdsourcing is an immense resource for law enforcement. It not only enables law enforcement to access expertise that it does not possess or often cannot afford, but it also allows for investigations to be conducted in real time – as opposed to official ex post facto investigations – and through global citizen participation. Thus, instead of being confined to a small number of official investigators that have specific but limited skills and resources, information may be generated, collected, and verified through thousands of persons who have immediate access to information and who have a broad range of relevant expertise.

Similarly, civil society organizations, scientific and educational institutions, health professionals, media organizations, and private sector corporations are increasingly active in collecting and publicizing information that is relevant to fighting climate change simply because this is consistent with their organizational or corporate sustainability objectives. During the annual RightsConFootnote 6 meetings, many of these organizations and corporations present their approaches and applications – some based on cutting edge technology – to generate, access, verify, and disseminate information. These entities harbour a huge amount of talent, expertise, and commitment. They represent invaluable sources of information, and are ideal first responders, because they often have access to information and the ability to preserve information long before government officials can conduct an official inquiry. In addition, they often have relevant expertise to verify information. Cooperation with these entities taps into a vast pool of information and expertise that is currently unavailable to most law enforcement entities. Law enforcement authorities increasingly appreciate the potential that cooperating with civil society organizations has for supporting their own work. Some have therefore issued guidelines on how civil society organizations should proceed when preserving and collecting information.Footnote 7

Developments in ICT have also revolutionized the types of information that can be made available to law enforcement. While in the past, most communication took place orally – either face-to-face or over the phone – today people increasingly communicate in writing or by sharing other forms of documentary information. For instance, by the end of 2019, some 2.95 billion people worldwide communicated through social media – which includes social networks, chat apps, blogs, forums, business networks, and photo-sharing platforms.Footnote 8 Unlike oral interactions, this form of communication is generally preserved. Because most of it is publicly available or otherwise accessible through the crowd, it can be a vital source of information for law enforcement, provided that it is lawfully obtained and properly verified and analyzed.

13.4 Seizing the Opportunity to Support and Scale Climate Enforcement and Litigation

There is a need – and an opportunity – to bridge the gap between the many investigative NGOs or individuals with access to information or expertise and law enforcement authorities and advocates who have the power to enforce the law or to advocate for it. If done effectively, providing the relevant actors with high quality information to support their work can strengthen and scale climate relevant enforcement and litigation.

CCCA has set out to do exactly that.Footnote 9 It uses its law enforcement expertise to strategically support, advise, and coordinate existing efforts by NGOs, scientific/expert organizations, and private citizens fighting climate change in order to generate, preserve, and collect information that is relevant, probative, and admissible in court. CCCA then conducts legal and forensic analyses of the information and prepares case files to share with competent law enforcement or regulatory authorities or with NGOs in support of strategic climate litigation and advocacy. These authorities or NGOs are thus provided with information and analysis that would otherwise not be available to them or only at a substantial cost.

CCCA is guided by the following core principles:

Focus on affected communities: Each CCCA project focuses on the communities affected by climate crime and human rights violations and actively involves them throughout the process. As part of its case selection process, CCCA assesses the affected communities’ needs and interests and their willingness to cooperate. CCCA also does a community risk assessment and develops a strategy to minimize community risk resulting from their cooperation with CCCA.

Network approach: At each phase of a case, CCCA cooperates with organizations and individuals who have access to relevant information or expertise. CCCA’s law enforcement experts advise, support, and coordinate the activities of these organizations, thereby building strong cases together. This has a force multiplier effect. First, it enhances the effectiveness and impact of the investigations conducted by CCCA’s partners. CCCA achieves this by focusing on collecting information, consolidating information from different groups, providing legal analysis of the information, and using CCCA’s expertise and connections to put the right case files before the right authorities or litigation groups. Second, CCCA’s approach empowers law enforcement authorities and advocacy organizations to pursue their mandates, including to address climate change.

Innovative investigative techniques and alternative forms of evidence: CCCA explores innovative investigative techniques and relies on alternative forms of evidence, including scientific evidence, cutting edge technological evidence (such as remote sensing satellite data), and modern open-source investigation techniques. Members of the affected communities provide valuable lead information or documentary/electronic evidence and assist in the collection and analysis of evidence on the ground. While victim testimonials collected by NGOs are effective in public advocacy, judges rarely rely on privately gathered statements to establish criminal or other responsibility. Witness-based investigations also present greater risks to victims and investigators, and they are more expensive. CCCA therefore prioritizes other forms of evidence and generally does not rely on victim testimonials.

Legality: CCCA strictly operates withing the framework of national laws. Although information from legitimate ‘whistle-blowers’ can be properly accepted, the solicitation or knowing acceptance of illegally obtained information is not consistent with CCCA’s approach.

Flexibility and pragmatism to maximize impact: While CCCA uses criminal law investigation and analysis techniques, it does not only promote criminal prosecution. CCCA strategically chooses and creatively promotes both legal and non-legal mechanisms to maximize the impact and benefits for the climate and the protection of human rights. By using criminal law’s stringent standards for evidence and proof, CCCA’s case files can be used for all forms of judicial or regulatory enforcement, civil litigation, and other forms of advocacy. This means that the enforcement of ‘hard law’ through courts and regulatory authorities is combined with efforts to persuade corporate actors to better manage legal and reputational risks or comply with their corporate climate, human rights, or sustainability standards.

13.5 Case Study: Illegal Deforestation and Its Drivers

The above approach has numerous potential climate-relevant applications. These include the targeting of GHG emissions generated by deforestation and forest degradation. The following case study examines both the underlying situation and the impact that an evidence-based approach can have.

13.5.1 Situation Analysis

Deforestation and forest degradation are major climate concerns. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, in its recent report on Climate Change and Land,Footnote 10 estimated that deforestation accounts for about 12 to 15 per cent of global GHG emissions. It recommends the urgent reduction of deforestation and forest degradation as a key mechanism to achieve the Paris Agreement’s primary objective of limiting the global temperature increase to well below two degrees Celsius. It further found that preserving existing tropical forest coverage is the most cost-effective way to achieve this objective through land use. It also poses the least competing land pressures, has additional positive impacts on the human rights of Indigenous people, and preserves high biodiversity ecosystems.

Most tropical deforestation is illegal: Reports from the World Bank,Footnote 11 the United National Environmental Program (UNEP), and INTERPOL,Footnote 12 indicate that up to 90 per cent of logging in key producer countries of tropical timber is illegal. These organizations all argue that law enforcement plays a critical role in addressing illegal deforestation. The experience of Brazil bears out this thesis: a combination of government policies with enforcement actions by prosecutors generated a positive response by the soy and beef industries – the main drivers of deforestation – which, in turn, resulted in a reduction of tropical deforestation in Brazil by 70 per cent within ten years.Footnote 13 Unfortunately, recent policy changes and the slowing of enforcement action have led to a significant increase in the rate of deforestation in Brazil. In fact, the Brazilian organization MapBiomas has noted that approximately 90 per cent of the current deforestation in the Amazon is not authorized and, thus, is illegal.Footnote 14

Deforestation is linked with other illegal activities. Deforestation is also often associated with other illegal activity: 50 to 90 per cent of deforestation in tropical countries is, for example, associated with organized crime. This can include violent offences like attacks on local or Indigenous communities, their leaders, and environmental or human rights defenders to gain access to land and prevent accountability for illegal deforestation. It can also include slave labour or financial offences such as corruption, fraud, and tax evasion.Footnote 15 These offences provide additional options for accountability and advocacy, regardless of whether the deforestation can be proven to be ‘illegal’ under the relevant domestic environmental or forestry laws. For example, the US Department of Treasury recently issued Global Magnitsky Act sanctions against a corrupt network responsible for illegal logging in Cambodia.Footnote 16

Local laws are often not effectively enforced. Enforcement in tropical forest countries is not currently effective at addressing this illegal deforestation, for a variety of reasons. It may be the result of a lack of resources or weak governance in some states hosting major tropical forests. And even when there is some enforcement, this is often not sufficient to prevent continued illegal deforestation (for example, fines are not paid, and strong local political support and profit motives undermine impact).

Foreign enforcement and advocacy can complement local efforts. Approximately 70 to 80 per cent of tropical deforestation is linked to commodity agriculture, including beef, soy, palm oil, and timber. Much of this is for export markets or is financed by international investors, insurers, or lenders. Regulators and law enforcement authorities from foreign countries (i.e., countries other than those where deforestation takes place) have the tools to target commodities derived from illegal deforestation, including legislation prohibiting the import of illegally logged timber (in the United States, European Union, Australia, and Japan), legislation requiring due diligence in the foreign operations of multinationals (in France and under development in other European jurisdictions), the authority to impose sanctions on entities and individuals linked with human rights violations and corruption (in the United States, Canada, and United Kingdom, in the European Union and under development in Australia), and money-laundering and proceeds of crime legislation. Investors, banks, other financial enterprises, and customers may also have other obligations from internal social or environmental policies, sector-specific due diligence requirements, or external standards such as the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. Actions by these external actors are an important step in addressing the chain of incentives, costs, and risks (financial, legal, and reputational) of illegal deforestation.

But foreign actors lack the information necessary to act. CCCA’s enquiries with national and international law enforcement authorities indicate that this law enforcement gap results from a lack of access to high quality information and support that would enable them to conduct effective enforcement proceedings. But this absence of effective proceedings is not reflective of a general lack of willingness by foreign enforcement authorities or a lack of tools that they could use if they had the relevant information. Similarly, international commodity traders and investors have declared the objective to ensure that their clients and supply chain be deforestation free – a policy whose enforcement is contingent on the availability of information linking their clients and supply chain to deforestation.Footnote 17

Traditionally, NGOs have not been able to fill this need. NGOs, especially those based in countries where illegal deforestation is taking place, have access to important information. But, in practice, NGOs have often been unable to provide foreign authorities with the sufficient quantity and quality of information that they need to act. NGOs often do not coordinate their action; they lack awareness of what information is required to trigger enforcement action; they may be unaware of the relevant authorities; or they may face competing urgent demands and be unable to prioritize building case files for external enforcement or advocacy. And public authorities in the countries where illegal deforestation is taking place often do not see it as part of their job to encourage foreign enforcement actions, even if they are aware of those options and have the capacity to pursue them.

13.5.2 Potential Impact of the Evidence-Based Approach

The above analysis reveals a gap: important evidence, materials, or existing findings by local authorities identifying illegal conduct are not generating their maximum potential impact. As a result, potentially influential enforcement options and advocacy targets are being under-utilized.

To generate, collect, and analyze all relevant information establishing underlying illegal conduct, supply chains, and financial structures, CCCA cooperates with multiple organizations. These include local grassroots organizations, organizations with national reach, international NGOs, and domestic law enforcement authorities. By rolling out a relatively high number of cases and by employing a variety of enforcement, litigation, and advocacy actions in relation to each case, CCCA intends to reduce deforestation in key tropical forest areas. It aims to do so by effectively cuttingoff those corporations who act illegally from the international market. They will find it significantly more difficult to sell their products or find international investors, lenders, and insurers. As a result of the activities of CCCA and its many partners, international trading partners will either be legally barred from trading or otherwise dealing with illegal suppliers in deforestation areas, or they will be persuaded to cut ties with their partners due to the financial costs or legal and reputational risks. The illegal actors in the deforestation area, on the other hand, will be incentivized to refrain from further illegal deforestation and related activities in order to stay in business.

As criminal prosecutors and law enforcement experts, CCCA sees on a daily basis that law enforcement – and, more important still, the realistic threat of being subject to law enforcement – has a unique ability to repress, disrupt, and deter the conduct of individuals and organizations. This is particularly true for business actors who generally take a rational approach to assessing risks and considering those risks as part of their decision-making.

13.6 Conclusion

Climate change is the defining issue of our time. There is no silver bullet solution to the climate emergency. Instead, it requires an unprecedented and coordinated response from governments, scientific institutions, businesses, NGOs, and many others. The judicial branch of government and law enforcement are a critical component in the global response to the climate emergency. However, to efficiently mobilize and support the judicial branch of government, NGOs, and private citizens must be more strategic in coordinating their action.

Technological developments enable NGOs and concerned citizens to strategically trigger and support legal proceedings by collecting and providing relevant and probative information that establishes the necessary factual foundation for these proceedings. CCCA harnesses this potential to make effective use of the information in judicial climate action and related initiatives. At a time when many political institutions in parts of the world appear paralyzed in the face of the unprecedented complexity of the climate emergency, the decisions of independent and impartial courts are a key component to addressing this unprecedented challenge.

14 The Case for Climate Visuals in the Courtroom

Kelly Matheson

Documenting is about conveying experiences.

Franco Viteri, Kichwa Leader, Sarayaku

A substantial evidentiary record documents that the [US] federal government has long promoted fossil fuel use despite knowing that it can cause catastrophic climate change, and that failure to change existing policy may hasten an environmental apocalypse.Footnote 1

Judge Hurwitz, 9th Circuit Court of Appeals writing for the majority in Juliana v. United States
14.1 The Case for Urgent and Creative Action

Climate change is the overarching crisis that not only prevents solutions to all of the world’s entrenched human rights tragedies – war, disease, migration, and poverty – but also exacerbates these global struggles. The unrelenting exploitation of fossil fuels devastates land, water, communities, and planetary life support systems. In turn, our changing climate threatens every one of our basic human and constitutional rights.

In June 2019, Philip Alston,Footnote 2 in his role as the UN Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, released a compelling call to action.Footnote 3 He reported on the catastrophic consequences of climate change for human rights, highlighting that billions of people will struggle even if warming is limited to the Paris target of 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.Footnote 4 According to science, this political target is too high to protect humanity.Footnote 5 Estimates from Alston’s report conclude that millions of people will face malnutrition due to devastating drought and many more will have to choose between starvation and migration. Five hundred million people will likely be exposed and vulnerable to water stress and 4.5 billion could be exposed to heat waves. The year 2017 alone saw 18.8 million people displaced across 135 countries – nearly twice the number displaced by conflict – as a result of disasters made more severe and frequent by climate change. And this figure is poised to rise significantly in the decades to come.

That is climate change by the numbers.

Alston went on to underscore that if we fail to find and implement urgent and extraordinary solutions to this urgent and extraordinary challenge, “we risk a ‘climate apartheid’ scenario where the wealthy pay to escape overheating, hunger, and conflict while the rest of the world is left to suffer.” His overarching advice to the human rights community was clear: “The community as a whole … needs to step up and engage determinedly and creatively with climate change.”

Heeding Alston’s call to action, and with an understanding that litigation is only one important part of the overall strategy needed restore the health of our atmosphere, this chapter briefly explores how the climate litigation community could ensure that the climate numbers move in the right direction by creatively deploying visual evidence to help secure courtroom decisions that manifest in landmark change.

14.2 The Case for Using Visual Evidence to Show the Unobservable and Unimaginable

On November 29, 1945, only a week into the trial, the … prosecution introduced an hour-long film titled “The Nazi Concentration Camps.” When the lights came up in the Palace of Justice all assembled sat in silence. The human impact of this visual evidence was a turning point in the Nuremberg trial. It brought the Holocaust into the courtroom.Footnote 6

Screengrab from the film “Nazi Concentration Camps”

© US Department of Defense

Some abuses are too incomprehensible for the human mind to accept as true merely because they cannot be readily observed. General Dwight D. Eisenhower understood this. From the moment Eisenhower witnessed, first-hand, the horrors of the Nazi concentration camps in April of 1945, he ordered American troops to film the liberation of the camps. In doing so, Eisenhower sought to document the extent of Nazi atrocities, defend against general public and media perceptions that these were propaganda stories or exaggerations of the truth, and provide visual evidence to help build a watertight case for a potential international military tribunal.

In October of 1945, Justice Robert H. Jackson took a leave from the US Supreme Court to serve as the Chief Prosecutor for the Nuremberg trials. While the meticulous paper records kept by the Nazis formed the backbone of the case brought against the twenty-three accused, Jackson, like Eisenhower, understood the important impact graphic images would have over written documents. In his opening statement, Jackson promised the panel of judges, and the world, that the prosecutorial team would not only prove their case with documents but with visual evidence too. And they did. The prosecution followed their opening statement by showing six reels, reflecting 6,000 feet of film footage, shot by American and British cameramen during the camps’ liberation.Footnote 7 Not only does this footage still inform our understanding of the Holocaust today, but historians also firmly believe this visual evidence was a turning point in the Nuremberg trials.Footnote 8

14.3 The Case for Climate Visuals in the Court of Public Opinion

More than any other issue [climate change] exposes the deepest workings of our minds, and shows our extraordinary and innate talent for seeing only what we want to see and disregarding what we would prefer not to know.

George Marshall, Founder, Climate Outreach Information Network

Social scientists specializing in the emerging field of climate communications understand what Eisenhower and Jackson knew – visual evidence can explain the unimaginable. They appreciate that visuals can debunk propaganda, rally public support, accelerate learning, and motivate implementation of needed policy, technological, and lifestyle changes.Footnote 9

However, today’s social scientists seeking to shed light on the serious threats posed by climate change face a far more perplexing challenge than Eisenhower and Jackson did in exposing the deeds of the Third Reich. Communications specialists need to convey the slow and incremental,Footnote 10 yet urgent and irreversible degradation inflicted by climate change on our everyday lives and basic rights. This task is much more difficult than conveying the mass, graphic, and acute violence implemented under the Nazi regime.

Motivated by this visual challenge, the early 2000s produced a plethora of research about how communications could effectively educate people about the causes and dangers of climate change and, in turn, encourage civic action and involvement. In 2005, Yale launched its pioneering program on Climate Change Communication.Footnote 11 George Mason University followed with its own center in 2007.Footnote 12 That same year, James Balog founded the Extreme Ice Survey (EIS). EIS captures time-lapse footage of receding glaciers, dying coral reefs, and deteriorating forests to reveal how quickly climate change is dramatically impacting the planet.Footnote 13 In 2016, Climate Visuals, a project of Climate Outreach, launched the world’s first evidence-based photography resource.Footnote 14 Through research, social scientists questioned how to best communicate the risks of a global problem with less certainty and day-to-day immediacy than most other, more familiar problems, yet that also poses far graver implications. To date, however, the vast majority of climate communications work has focused on advancing public understanding of how climate change already affects our lives, rather than assisting the courts in understanding their essential role in flattening the climate curve.

Conventional litigators may argue that there is not a pressing need to present courts with visual evidence of climate change because judges around the world consistently treat the climate science introduced in strategic litigation as valid and authoritative. Judges describe the evidence of human-induced climate change as “copious,” “compelling,” “substantial,” and a “fact of life.”Footnote 15 Judges find that “the unprecedented rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels stemmed from fossil fuel combustion and will wreak havoc on the Earth’s climate if unchecked.”Footnote 16 Moreover, fossil fuel use “can cause catastrophic climate change, and that failure to change existing policy may hasten an environmental apocalypse.”Footnote 17 Based on the scientific evidence, judges consistently and definitively conclude that the climate is warming, that human activity is driving the observed and anticipated changes, and that those changes will have a variety of adverse impacts across the globe. Yet, ultimately, the courts routinely dismiss many of the strategic climate cases brought to protect our basic human and constitutional rights on standing, justiciability, or legislative displacement grounds.Footnote 18 Understanding that the overarching scientific evidence of global climate change is commonly accepted by courts, litigators should also consider focusing their attention on cultivating a robust evidentiary record that (i) ensures courts expressly recognize the personal injuries that result from climate change and (ii) demonstrates the viable solutions that can address the climate emergency. Building this record is essential as injury and redressability appear to be far less tangible to the courts.

This chapter now turns to the question of whether environmental human rights litigators – building on the research of climate change communications experts – should corroborate the incontrovertible scientific evidenceFootnote 19 with robust visual evidence showing courts exactly how unchecked atmospheric warming will continue to violate our common rights enshrined in constitutions across the globe. And, if so, how?

14.4 Case Notes: Visual Evidence in the Courtroom

The persuasive oral rhetoric of lawyers is increasingly being replaced by compelling visual media displays presenting a range of digital evidence in a convincing and credible manner.

Frederic Lederer, Director, Center for Legal and Court Technology, William and Mary Law School

While Nuremberg marks the first moment that cinematic evidence convinced the world of an unimaginable truth, the first known use of film as courtroom evidence took place in 1928. In United States v. Feather River Lumber Co., the prosecutor presented moving pictures depicting the aftermath of a forest fire in Northern California to help prove that the Feather River Lumber Company negligently destroyed timber in the Plumas National Forest when one of its railroad engines started a fire.Footnote 20 The film footage admitted showed the burnt forest and fallen stands of timber three years after the fire. The District Court relied on these images, along with other evidence, to find Feather River Lumber Company liable for degrading natural resources and award damages to the US government.

Since Feather River, the worth of images to serve as evidence of human and environmental rights violations has endured the test of time. Images have – and always will – excel at showing the aftermath of destruction, whether it be the destruction of human life or the shared natural resources that we all depend upon for our survival. As the methods to capture visual evidence grow, so do the opportunities to leverage visuals for accountability and justice. To explore how visual evidence has, and could be, leveraged in rights-based climate litigation moving forward, this section examines three Case Notes from the Sinangoe and Sarayaku communities of Ecuador, as well as the Native Village of Kipnuk in Alaska.

14.4.1 Kofan Indigenous People of Sinangoe v. Ecuador Ministry of MiningFootnote 21

The high-Andean peaks of the Cayambe-Coca Ecological ReserveFootnote 22 in Ecuador safeguard the headwaters of the majestic Aguarico River – a major tributary of the Amazon River that is vitally important to dozens of Indigenous communities and the ancestral home of the Kofan people of Sinangoe.Footnote 23 In 2017, the Kofan established the Guardia Indigena (Indigenous Guard), training dozens of community members in GPS mapping, photo and video documentation, and the use of drones and camera traps to protect their territory from outsiders illegally entering their lands to extract natural resources like gold, timber, and wildlife.

In early 2018, the Guards heard the low hum of a motor while patrolling along densely forested mountain trails. Instead of approaching, they flew a drone to investigate. The drone captured the unexpected: images of illegal gold-mining activity on the banks of the Aguarico River. Upon further investigation, the Kofan learned that, in December 2017, the Ecuadorian government began granting new gold mining concessions in the headwaters of the river. The government granted these claims without notifying or consulting with the community of Sinangoe, despite the government’s knowledge that mining would directly impact the Kofan community, the river they depended on, their land, and their way of life. The situation escalated when the miners began operating without the required permits and illegally mined outside of the concessions’ boundaries. In the months that followed, the Indigenous Guard methodically gathered relevant, reliable, and trial-ready visual evidence, illustrating exactly how the illegal mining operations affected their ancestral lands for use in a lawsuit against the Ecuadorian government.

By June 2018, armed with a watertight evidentiary record, including irrefutable and convincing visual documentation, the Kofan took their case to court.

The mining site along the Aguarico River, upriver from the Kofan community of Sinangoe in the Ecuadorian Amazon, as seen by a drone

© Amazon Frontlines and Alianza Ceibo

As part of the case, the Kofan needed to prove that the mining operations adversely impacted their territory. Inside the courtroom, their legal team systematically walked through the array of thoughtfully curated visual evidence. They introduced drone footage and satellite imagery into the evidentiary record to show how mining operations rapidly expanded over time and, in turn, how the scar along the once-pristine riverbank broadened with every passing week.Footnote 24 They submitted photos and video footage collected on cell phones to show how heavy machinery flattened the forest and compacted the soil. The cell phone images also demonstrated how the extractive activities increased the sedimentation levels of the Aguarico River, making it unsuitable for drinking, bathing, and fishing. The legal team then augmented the imagery of the actual mining site with maps that showed the proximity of the extractive operations to the Kofans’ territorial boundaries. The maps helped convey to the court how the mining activity directly and adversely impacted the community’s natural and cultural resources.

On October 22, 2018, the Kofan won a landmark legal battle that nullified fifty-two mining concessions that had been granted by the Ecuadorian government in violation of the Kofans’ right to consultation.Footnote 25 This decision protected the headwaters of the Aguarico River and freed more than 32,000 hectares of primary rainforest from the devastating environmental and cultural impacts of gold mining. Specifically, the Provincial Court of Justice of Sucumbíos found that the government failed to consult with the Kofan prior to authorizing the mining concessions; denounced the mining operations for having violated Indigenous rights to water, food, and a healthy environment; and canceled all mining concessions laying at the foothills of the Andes. The historic ruling, upheld by Ecuador’s highest court – the Constitutional Court – on January 27, 2022, invoked the precautionary principleFootnote 26 and cited the rights to nature embedded in Ecuador’s Constitution while finding that the government violated those rights.Footnote 27 It also orders authorities to implement restoration measures at the site.

While the Kofan built a strong record consisting of many sources of evidence, the community’s ability to strategically leverage visual evidence guaranteed that all levels of Ecuador’s judiciary had only one legitimate choice: to conclude that mining operations adversely impacted Kofan territory.Footnote 28 Not only does this case demonstrate how present-day tools to capture visual evidence of environmental destruction have dramatically improved since the days of the Feather River case nearly a century ago, it also serves as a concrete case study of how visuals can help prove the link between harm to the forest and harm to community well-being. Finally, the decision, affirmed and strengthened on by Ecuador’s Constitutional Court, serves as inspiration for Indigenous nations worldwide facing similar struggles, and it will galvanize the fight to protect Indigenous lands for years to come.

14.4.2 Kichwa Indigenous People of Sarayaku v. EcuadorFootnote 29

The Indigenous community of Sarayaku sits deep within the Amazon Rainforest, along the banks of Ecuador’s Bobonaza River and in the heart of one of the most biologically diverse places on Earth. Encircled with natural beauty, the Sarayaku follow their ancestral way of life – hunting, gathering, and farming within their territory. Sarayaku land possesses natural resources that cannot be readily seen. Hidden beneath the surface lay vast oil reserves that Ecuador’s government and fossil fuel corporations had been eyeing for exploitation for decades.

In 1996, the Ecuadorian government granted the Argentinian energy giant, Compañía General de Combustibles S.A. (CGC),Footnote 30 rights to explore for oil in Sarayaku territory. This decision was made in direct violation of a 1992 legal agreement in which the Ecuadorian government legally recognized Sarayaku territory and guaranteed the community’s freedom from intruders. Despite the agreement, with the protection of Ecuador’s armed forces, the CGC entered Sarayaku lands in 1999. Without permission, the company began opening trails through the forest, building heliports, destroying sacred sites, and burying over 3,000 pounds of explosives in the forest to facilitate seismic exploration. This forced entry led to various confrontations between the Sarayaku, the company, and Ecuador’s armed forces, culminating in threats against the Sarayaku leaders and violence against community members.

This illegal invasion of Sarayaku territory, and subsequent trespass by CGC, ignited a decade-long legal battle between the Sarayaku and the state of Ecuador.Footnote 31 At the heart of this rights-based case was whether the community of Sarayaku consented to oil exploration on its land and whether the state of Ecuador threatened the personal integrity of community members when it provided CGC with protection during the forced entry. As with every adversarial process, the stories differed. Fortunately, a courageous young filmmaker from the community, Eirberto Gualinga, captured images on camera that helped prove the Sarayaku had the truth on its side.

To complement the traditional forms of evidence submitted to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) – testimony, documents, technical reports – the Sarayaku also submitted visual evidence to corroborate and contextualize several of the community’s core legal claims.

First, during the company’s exploration of the land, CGC flew helicopters into the dense jungle to drop off company workers. Eirberto captured one of the landings with his camera. As the helicopter arrived on the riverbank, the video shows CGC workers stepping out and being met by a group of women from the community. The women peacefully – yet expressly – demand respect of their territory and that the oil workers leave.Footnote 32 Further, they clearly explain that the community, as a whole, has repeatedly told the head of CGC that the company is not allowed on Sarayaku land.Footnote 33

CGC employees landing in Sarayaku territory

© Eirberto Gualinga

The community further communicated its dissent to the corporate and military presence by taking peaceful action. During an assembly, the Sarayaku people declared a state of emergency, halted their daily lives, divided into groups, and spread out to six locations along the boundary of their territory, establishing “Peace and Life Camps.” They set up the camps to mark their borders, peacefully protest, and dissuade CGC and the Ecuadorian military from entering Sarayaku territory. Video of the camps shared with the court corroborated witness testimony explaining the reasons that camps were set up and the calm, communal, and peaceful character at the sites.Footnote 34

To help prove that the Ecuadorian government interfered with the community’s rights to freedom of movement, the Sarayaku introduced video showing military checkpoints and Ecuadorian soldiers blocking the Bobonaza River – the community’s primary transportation route.Footnote 35 In the video, soldiers are seen stopping and searching boats at the checkpoint, resulting in a basic invasion of privacy in addition to the restrictions on movement. Additional admitted footage depicted damage to the land caused by exploration activities, including trash dumps, flaring, oil spills, and deforestation. The sum of footage ultimately helped prove direct environmental harm caused by the occupation.Footnote 36

While strategic litigation will never be won on video evidence alone, the video evidence played at least two key roles in protecting over 330,000 acres of primary Amazon rainforest that shelters the community of Sarayaku and serves as a critical carbon sinkFootnote 37 for the global community. First, the images painted a vivid picture of violations faced by the Sarayaku, thereby contextualizing the myriad rights violations perpetrated by the company in collaboration with the government during the invasion. Second, the video evidence substantiated a number of the core legal claims at the center of the case.

The IACHR issued its final, unanimous decision in June 2012, finding that Ecuador violated the Sarayaku’s rights to property, life, physical, mental and moral integrity, fair trial, and judicial protection.Footnote 38 In the judgment, the court ruled that governments must consult with Indigenous communities throughout the Americas prior to implementing activities that affect their land, recognized the existence of collective rights as opposed to individual rights, and further enshrined a right to cultural identity in law.Footnote 39 This monumental judgment was not only a victory for the Sarayaku but was also a major step forward in the fight to safeguard Indigenous rights and the climate-stabilizing forests they defend.

14.4.3 Kanuk v. State of Alaska

In 2011, Nelson Kanuk, a sixteen-year old native Alaskan from the village of Kipnuk, alongside five other young plaintiffs, brought suit against the state of Alaska, arguing that the Public Trust Doctrine codified in Alaska’s Constitution imposes an affirmative fiduciary obligation on the state of Alaska to manage shared natural resources, including the atmosphere, for the common good.Footnote 40 They further argued that this constitutional obligation requires the state to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to slow the rate of climate change in order to ensure that the plaintiffs and future generations can inherit a viable atmospheric resource and other protected resources of the state that secure a livable future.Footnote 41

When litigants bring action against governments, they usually must file a standing declaration.Footnote 42 Standing declarations are the heart of many human rights cases brought against governments.Footnote 43 The declarations, written by the plaintiffs, tell the powerful human story behind the lawsuit.

Nelson in the film TRUST Alaska

© Our Children’s Trust and WITNESS

In his legally sworn statement to the court, Nelson explained why climate change was personal for him. He wrote, “climate change has adversely affected me and impacted my life by delaying the onset of winter. For example, in Kipnuk, the snow used to start falling earlier than it does now. Also, the sea ice starts forming later than in the past and melts earlier in the spring. Although this might not seem to be too significant, it is critically important for me, my village, and our way of life.”Footnote 44 Nelson’s statement went on to detail how the late freeze and early thaw causes dangerous flooding and rapid erosion, threatening his home and limiting the availability of food and water sources, jeopardizing his community’s subsistence lifestyle.

Many of Alaska’s government officials responsible for protecting the state’s shared natural resources denied or simply ignored the scientific fact that a warming climate results in grave harm to native communities – despite abundant documentation to the contrary. Understanding that personal stories can change minds and knowing that legal documents all too often do not get read by the people who should consider them, Nelson, together with Our Children’s Trust, WITNESS, and iMatter, produced an eight-minute film, TRUST Alaska,Footnote 45 using his standing declaration as the shooting script. The film brings the black and white, Times New Roman legal text to life.

In the award-winning film, audiences have the opportunity to meet Nelson, a young Yup’ik firefighter and Native Olympic athlete, who learned how climate change was affecting his community and felt he could best help by sharing his story. Staying true to the facts in his declaration, Nelson shows viewers his small village, introduces his family, and takes audiences on a family boat trip to pick berries while describing how he lives a subsistence lifestyle. He explains that the main problem facing the northern parts of the world is that winter comes later and later. This results in increased flooding due to warmer temperatures, increased erosion due to permafrost melt, and intensified storms because the sea ice forms later in the season and is unable to provide a natural barrier for coastal communities. This, in turn, leads to the loss of homes, communities, cultures, and a way of life.

Nelson’s film was the third in a ten-part series called Stories of TRUST: Calling for Climate Recovery.Footnote 46 Each film shows how the lives of other youth plaintiffs from across the United States are harmed by climate change. These plaintiffs, and the NGOs they collaborated with, did not produce the films to be submitted as evidence in the cases they brought. Instead, the films propelled a strategic communications plan, developed specifically to support the goals of the strategic litigation and the broader TRUST Campaign.

Nelson’s film screened all over the world – in classrooms in his home state of Alaska, in gymnasiums packed full of students in other US states, during keynote presentations by committed environmental human rights lawyers, and at convenings with Indigenous leaders from around the world. As film festivals across the globe showed Nelson’s film on the big screen, festival juries recognized the magnitude of his story with awards. The film also reached key decision-makers. After viewing his story, State Congressional Representatives invited Nelson to present in front of the Alaskan State Legislature. Then-head of the US Environmental Protection Agency, Lisa Jackson, wrote asking for copies of his film. Shortly after, TRUST Alaska, along with four other films from the series, were hand-delivered to President Obama in the Oval Office.

What began as an Alaskan story to complement human rights–based climate litigation soon grew into a gold-star communications campaign with international recognition and influence. In many ways, the TRUST Campaign laid the foundation that we collectively stand upon today, advancing our understanding that a healthy atmosphere is an inherent human right.

Unexpectedly, the film also reached the Alaska Supreme Court. The Alaska Inter-Tribal Council (AITC) is an Indigenous-led nonprofit organization that advocates in support of Tribal governments throughout the state. AITC submitted an Amicus Curiae briefFootnote 47 in support of the youth, describing how Alaskan Natives are particularly impacted by a warming climate. As part of the submission, AITC included Nelson’s film. Although the film could not serve as direct evidence given that it was edited for external communications purposes, it could provide context and ground the court in the fundamental constitutional rights at stake.

While the Alaska Supreme Court fell short of granting the youth their desired legal remedies, the court issued important rulings that moved rights-based climate law forward and opened the door for the next round of litigation in Alaska. The court wrote that the youth “make a good case … that the atmosphere is an asset of the public trust, with the State as trustee and the public as beneficiary.” The court seemingly agreed with the youth that the state of Alaska has obligations to combat climate change, calling the science of anthropogenic climate change “compelling” and citing numerous climate science studies and reports. The court also stated that the atmosphere and the ecosystems it protects should be subject to constitutional protections, even without the court’s legal declaration that the atmosphere is part of the public trust. Nonetheless, the Court ruled that it could not order the relief requested by the plaintiffs because the “underlying policy” choices regarding the state’s response to climate change were not the Court’s to make “in the first instance.”Footnote 48

Respecting the Court’s guidance, 16 young Alaskans filed a new suit against the state of Alaska in 2017. Their opening complaint explained to the Court that the state had already enacted underlying climate policy “in the first instance” that, at its heart, affirmatively promotes fossil fuels. The youth, together with their legal team, then explained how this pro-fossil fuel policy violates their fundamental rights under the due process, equal protection, and public trust provisions of Alaska Constitution.Footnote 49

In a three-to-two split decision, a narrow majority of the Alaska Supreme Court ultimately declined to order the youth’s requested relief for “prudential reasons.” However, the Court again provided guidance for future rights-based climate claims in Alaska and wrote a powerful dissent.

The dissent recognizes a “right to a livable climate – arguably the bare minimum when it comes to the human rights to which the Alaska Constitution is dedicated.”Footnote 50 In the words of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg, “Dissents speak to a future age … the greatest dissents do become court opinions and gradually over time their views become the dominant view. So that's the dissenter's hope: that they are writing not for today, but for tomorrow.” It the youth of today, who courageously share their stories with our courts, that set the stage, for tomorrow. It is the youth of today, hand-in-hand with human right litgators, that will succeed in securing constitutional rights to a climate system capable of sustaining humanity.

14.5 The Case for Climate Visuals in Support of Rights-Based Strategic Litigation

I am a generalist judge. And so, I’m heavily dependent upon the briefs that are filed and upon the arguments that are made.

Justice Breyer, Associate Justice, US Supreme Court

A striking characteristic of human memory is that pictures are, remarkably, remembered better than words.Footnote 51 This once-intuitive, and now scientifically proven, fact has propelled the use of visual evidence dating back as far as the Feather River case in 1928. Since then, and as the Case Notes above illustrate, lawyers have supplemented their briefs and oral arguments with robust visual evidence to help judges appreciate the complexities of a case and the consequences of their decisions.

As noted by former US Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, enhancing judicial understanding is an essential part of any litigator’s work. When answering a direct question about the breadth of the public trust doctrine – one of the key legal issues under consideration in Kanuk v. State of Alaska – in US federal law, Justice Breyer responded, “I don’t know.”Footnote 52 He then eloquently explained that since judges are “generalists,” they must rely on legal scholars and practitioners to inform the courts’ understanding of how to interpret and apply the law in relation to changing global circumstances. Tasked with the responsibility of conveying the facts of a case clearly and linking the facts to the law, lawyers would be remiss if they failed to consider how visual evidence may strengthen cases and, in turn, secure justice and accountability for clients – and in the case of climate litigation – for the world.

This is especially true given the current technological landscape. Today, the opportunities to use visual evidence to help secure legal accountability for human rights violations are more accessible as a result of the advance of new technologies, especially the proliferation of the camera. The number of smartphone/camera-ready users surpassed three billion in 2020 and is forecast to reach nearly four billion by 2021.Footnote 53 The mass adoption and usage of drones for aerial photography is still in its infancy, but drone development is rapidly underway due to significant investments pouring into this promising industry. The number of satellite-based monitoring applications and technologies publicly available has also exploded in recent years.Footnote 54 In turn, it is not surprising that courtroom environments – one of the last bastions of oral tradition – are morphing into cinematic display environments in an effort to better communicate with judges.Footnote 55 To date, however, the use of visuals in the emerging field of rights-based climate litigation has been limited, despite the strong potential to leverage visuals for meaningful results. To illustrate the potential of visuals in climate litigation, Section 14.5.1 will consider how the legal team representing the survivors of Australia’s devastating bushfires could curate and present visual evidence as part of their recently filed climate case.

14.5.1 Bushfire Survivors for Climate Action Incorporated v. Environment Protection AuthorityFootnote 56

Just before the fiftieth anniversary of Earth Day, survivors of Australia’s 2019/2020 bushfire crisis took legal action to force the New South Wales Environmental Protection Authority (NSW EPA) to address climate change. The case, Bushfire Survivors for Climate Action Incorporated v. Environment Protection Authority, seeks to compel the NSW EPA to develop policies and guidelines to regulate greenhouse gas emissions and sustain a safe climate. If the NSW EPA fights the case, the list of emblematic, visual evidence that could – and may – be curated for the proceedings is long. Visuals could be used to show the

  • extent of property damage by submitting photos and video of a selection of the over 5,900 buildings, including over 2,800 homes lost, before and after the fires;

  • vast ecological damage to the millions of acres scorched by introducing video footage captured by a drone and corroborated by both satellite imagery and on-the-ground photos and videos from the burnt areas;

  • loss of biodiversity by submitting a series of photos of animal carcasses, showing the array of animals that perished in the fires or footage from infrared-equipped drones that located injured wildlife in the aftermath of the Australian wildfires;Footnote 57

  • intense smoke and air pollution stemming from the fires by showing photos and videos of smoke plumes, visible degradation of air quality in the major cities near the fires, and/or satellite imagery of the smoke as seen from space as it drifted across the Pacific Ocean;

  • the myriad of physical injuries sustained by survivors – from burns to eye irritation to respiratory problems from exposure to smoke, hazardous gases, and particulate matter – by introducing photos of injuries and videos of respiratory problems;

  • triggers leading to mental health problems by submitting corroborating material showing the experiences survivors endured (e.g., being trapped in high-risk areas, the trauma of emergency evacuations along blocked roads, or watching unprecedented firestorms from temporary shelters on beaches, boats, or in empty fields);

  • pollution in the aftermath of the fires by sharing photos and videos of the ash that landed on school playgrounds and in backyards, or washed up on beaches;

  • damage to water supplies from the destruction of infrastructure or the growth of cyanobacteria (commonly known as blue-green algae) by submitting visuals of melted water pipes, fallen trees on or over freshwater catchments, and the growth of cyanobacteria and plankton blooms; and

  • the price tag to the Australian economy and livelihoods by showing damaged infrastructure such as burnt businesses, scorched pastures, razed vineyards, and killed livestock.

Depending on the precise rights violations the plaintiffs need to prove – from loss of property to loss of life, or loss or livelihoods to loss of health – the ideas in this non-exhaustive list could be used as direct or corroborative evidence to prove materials facts, to contextualize or corroborate expert reports, or supplement Amicus Curiae briefs. And, this is just one short list of visuals for one case.

14.6 Closing Argument

The least we can do is: not look away. Not justify. Not erase. Not brush aside. Not make something “normal” that is not. And: nurture and defend our free, democratic constitution. Because only that is what will protect us from terror and insanity.Footnote 58

Willem-Alexander, King of the Netherlands

When presented with the horrifying visual evidence of the Holocaust, many of us cover our eyes, driven by the human desire to avoid experiencing pain and discomfort. I cannot help but wonder if we are doing the same with respect to our changing climate. But looking away will not make the problem disappear.

I live in the Netherlands. The warehouse where Anne Frank spent twenty-five months in forced hiding in a small attic is a ten-minute walk from my front door. Within fifteen minutes by bike, I can arrive at Muiderpoort, the station where hundreds of onlookers quietly witnessed the heavily guarded trams overflowing with people on their way to Nazi concentration camps, yet said nothing. Spring 2020 marked the seventy-fifty anniversary of the end of World War II, an ominous reminder that we must face global challenges with a fierce and unwavering commitment to human rights.

Complex political problems require complex solutions. Video evidence alone will certainly not solve the climate crisis. However, as demonstrated through the Case Notes here, the strategic and effective use of visual evidence matters. So perhaps, in response to Alston’s call to step up and engage determinedly and creatively with climate change, it is time to bring climate visuals into the courtroom to ensure that judges, and society at large, cannot look away, justify, erase, brush aside, or make “normal”something that is decidedly not.

15 The Story of Our Lives Narrative Change Strategies in Climate Litigation

Laura Gyte , Violeta Barrera , and Lucy Singer Footnote *

Narratives are about invisible power. How perceptions, belief systems and ideology shape the way people define what is ‘right’ and what is ‘wrong’.

Phumi Mtetwa, Just Associates (JASS)Footnote 1

This chapter examines the role that stories and narratives can play in the development of climate litigation strategies. Section 15.1 covers an introduction to thinking on narratives, the way they work to support or challenge the status quo, and some helpful definitions. Section 15.2 looks at some examples of successful reframings of narratives in campaigns. Section 15.3 draws on the existing literature on narratives in climate litigation to highlight some dominant narratives that are problematic and some new narratives that are being deployed. This chapter concludes with a suggested checklist for considering narratives in climate litigation strategy and case work and pointers to additional resources and networks.

15.1 Introduction

Narratives are not something that happen ‘over there’, they are part of us and we are part of them. We can challenge or reinforce narratives on a daily basis. We see powerful damaging narratives at work in the COVID-19 response, and in systems of oppression that perpetuate inequality. We can use this knowledge to guide us now and as we move into the future.Footnote 2

Narrative knowledge and framing know-how can help ensure that climate litigation not only achieves an outcome within the case but also works on a deeper level to connect with people and shift power, helping to transform underlying ideas, norms, and systems. The scale and speed at which a just transition needs to be implemented far outpaces the timelines of litigation – to secure 1.5 degrees, climate advocates need to build political power and lots of it.

So, how can cases be designed so that, in addition to securing a legal result, they achieve greater, quicker impact by working to strengthen and diversify the climate justice movement? Where can the cases connect to new emerging stories and narratives that are able to motivate and engage more people, and where can litigation be part of shifting the dial on what is considered common sense and on what people believe is possible? And also, importantly, how can litigators avoid playing into damaging dominant narratives that are constraining collective global action?

15.2 What Is a Narrative Change Strategy?

Story, as it turns out, was crucial to our evolution …. Opposable thumbs let us hang on; story told us what to hang on to.

Lisa CronFootnote 3

Storytelling and deploying narratives are not new – in many ways, they are instinctual, and different approaches and practices happen in many different spaces. The power of storytelling in fostering change is an area of professional focus across many disciplines. Oxfam and On Think Tanks collaborated on a project to interview diverse people from across the globe about their role in challenging and reshaping narratives, as part of Oxfam’s work on protecting and opening civic space. The people interviewed come from different sectors and disciplines – from activism to the arts and strategy to science and marketing. They shared their knowledge, ideas, tips, and tactics from their lived experience in the anthology Narrative Power and Collective Action.Footnote 4

The conversations started in the anthology on the power of narrative and collective action for positive change continue beyond it. With respect to designing litigation and case strategies, joining this conversation can foster greater consciousness of how the story/ the case tells and the narratives it engages can reinforce or disrupt the status quo and thus contribute to, or disrupt, the efforts of the wider climate movement.

The conversations contained in the anthology underscore that narratives are a form of power that can mobilize and connect, as well as divide and isolate. Social, public, or dominant narratives help to legitimize existing power relationships, prop them up, or make them seem natural.Footnote 5 Narrative frames also ‘structure for the audience the cause of social problems and prescribe which actors should or should not act to address them’.Footnote 6 Section 15.2 will look at some concrete examples of how movements have tackled dominant narratives and established new narratives.

Below are some definitions from allies working in this field (Frameworks Institute and The Narrative Initiative):

  • Narrative change: ‘A narrative reflects a shared interpretation of how the world works. Who holds power and how they use it is both embedded in and supported by dominant narratives. Successful narrative change shifts power as well as dominant narratives.’Footnote 7

  • Frames: ‘Sets of choices about how concepts are presented: what to emphasise, where to start, how to explain it, what to leave unsaid. The way information is framed has dramatic effects on what people think, feel and are willing to do.’Footnote 8

  • Stories: ‘In a story, something happens to someone or something. Typically, a story has a beginning, middle and end. Stories transmit a society’s ideas, beliefs, behaviours, humour, style and trends from one person to another, that collectively create the culture we live in. Stories are told.’Footnote 9

  • Narratives: ‘Narratives permeate collections or systems of related stories. They have no standard structure, but instead are articulated and refined repeatedly as they are instantiated in a variety of stories and messages. Narratives are understood.’Footnote 10

  • Deep narratives: ‘Deep narratives are characterized by pervasiveness and intractability. They provide a foundational framework for understanding both history and current events, and inform our basic concepts of identity, community and belonging. Just as narratives permeate collections of related stories, so too do deep narratives permeate collections of related narratives. It is difficult to connect with audiences directly at the level of deep narrative, but higher level narratives can provide a way in.’Footnote 11

This is powerful because narratives trigger emotions – hope, empathy, fear, guilt – which are hugely influential in terms of how a person will respond to an issue. Will they support climate action or feel excluded or demotivated – or even antipathy?

For the purpose of this chapter, there are four key relevant learnings from the Narrative Power and Collective Action collaboration to highlight, though there are many more beyond these as well.

First, who tells the story and who shares the story are critical considerations. Whose existence and experience is elevated? Who needs to see themselves in the story? Who needs to share the story for it to be credible – trust and legitimacy are key. Can the story be told in a different way that better connects with people and their lived experience? For climate litigation, this involves reflecting with allies on the potential claimants and spokespeople for a case, as well as on the facts it will present.

Second, the strategies deployed in climate ligation will be asymmetrical relative to those strategies supporting a currently dominant narrative. Climate litigators can’t meet, for example, the narrative strategies deployed by populists or climate change deniers like for like, so climate litigators need to examine how to bridge movements; short circuit power with humour, culture, and hope; cut through the noise; and foster connections. Litigators can draw on the skills of climate communicators in the movement to construct communication strategies that make the best use of the moment created by litigation to drive narratives that will motivate people to support climate action.

Third, reacting to the dominant narrative can backfire and reinforce the dominant message as well as lock litigators into an existing power dynamic. Instead, litigators can aim to ‘flip’ the narrative and drive a new narrative that does not need to be seen as related.

Fourth, with respect to narratives, climate advocates have to walk the talk. Advocates cannot challenge a narrative that the climate movement is (at least in the Global North) urban, white, and elite if that contains a painful element of truth. Similarly, what they do is the message. So, if advocates want to say that climate action is for everyone, then the climate movement needs to genuinely reflect that. The movement needs to be that new narrative as well.Footnote 12

The Narrative Initiative’s practical Four Baskets tool is helpful for thinking about the capacities and processes needed to create, implement, and continually strengthen narrative change projects. The most helpful narratives should be identified by climate movements working together in a particular context, with climate litigators joining as a part of that movement. Climate litigation can then consciously be considered in terms of how it can support and achieve impact across the following four ingredients the Narrative Initiative identifies: (1) create (articulate the new narrative as well as the old dominant narrative that advocates are trying to shift away from); (2) translate (identify the audiences that need to adopt this narrative and find ways to express the narrative that are meaningful to them); (3) drive (move the narrative into the public domain by designing effective narrative interventions, while mapping the channels and tools that will be used); and, finally, (4) observe (map where the new narrative is being adopted).Footnote 13

15.3 Narrative Change in Campaigns for Action

You can pay a whole team of publicists to come up with a slogan, or you can give a few kids a spray can and some cardboard and boom, you have one that really connects with people.

Elena Mejía Julca, feminist, rapper and youth collective leader, Peru
15.3.1 Ley Pulpin, PeruFootnote 14

Narratives supporting the status quo in Peru and undermining social change include narratives like ‘people are poor because they want to be, they don’t make an effort’ and, in relation to activists, ‘they are all corrupt and get into this work to get a good salary and live off people’s poverty’. These formed part of the backdrop to a movement of youth activists in Peru challenging a new law, the Ley Pulpin, which was promoted as something that would benefit young workers, but analysis of the legislation showed that it was in reality more about deregulation and obtaining cheap labour from young workers. A movement led by young people came together to challenge the law. In Elena’s words:

When we took to the streets there were some amazing placards, people can be super creative making catchy slogans. Someone came up with ‘Cholo, pero no barato’. Everyone understood this new narrative, there were more placards saying this and people started using the phrase. It unified the message and cut through the noise. The ‘Cholo pero no barato’ framing has a lot of cultural baggage – a deep connection to Peru’s history. But those meanings are not static. A great thing about working with young people is you see them appropriating words. When people are really living the issue, they take ownership of the creative process. It’s their fight and that’s where the impressive creativity flows.Footnote 15

Together, the new slogan and stories engaged new positive narratives of pride in young Peruvian workers.

15.3.2 Even It Up: Economic Inequality

Even it Up is a campaign against extreme economic and social inequality, which threatens to reverse progress on eradicating poverty. It was launched in 2014 and is Oxfam’s ‘biggest ever worldwide campaign’. Robust independent evidence made the link between inequality and poverty clear; however, talking about economic inequality quickly engages deep narratives that are explicitly deployed to maintain the status quo in many economies. The most fundamental of these is the narrative that economic inequality is inevitable. Linked narratives are that extreme wealth is aspirational, that wealth trickles down without state intervention, that wealth or poverty always reflect effort or skills, and that people are poor as a result of their own actions.

The campaign recognized the many positive narratives that could also be engaged through work on economic inequality and that being able to engage these would be critical to building pressure and political will and ultimately securing policy change (on progressive taxes, on work and wages, and on quality health and education for all). So, the campaign looked at how it could communicate its messages to support existing but less dominant narratives, including that extreme inequality hurts everyone, that high levels of economic inequality are the result of political and economic choices, and that people can demand change.

15.3.3 Human Stories

The book Narrative Power and Collective Action includes an interview with Aidan Miller of Cast from Clay, who references the organization’s research findings that emotion plays an important role not only in how the majority of the population form their (small p) political views but in how policymakers form their political views as well. Strong facts and policy arguments are not enough, on their own, to motivate people to take action. Evoking something deeply human in audiences and finding stories to which people can relate and which create empathy can help connect more people and make alternative ideas seem relatable and possible.

Even it Up launched with an extensive research reportFootnote 16 that informed a range of communications, including a flagship film called Hard work. Fair reward? The film tells the story of Lan, who works long hours in a factory in Vietnam producing shoes for global fashion brands. She makes 1,200 pairs per day but doesn’t earn enough to buy one pair for her son. She’s forced to live far away from her two young children. Through the film, we learn that a garment worker in Vietnam often earns less than eight dollars a day, whilst a CEO of a top fashion brand earns almost 16,000 dollars a day. Lan’s life and working conditions powerfully connect with a different narrative – that high levels of economic inequality are the result of structural problems rather than an individual lack of effort on the part of those trapped in poverty. The film engaged people’s instinctive feeling that there is something wrong with such extreme levels of inequality.

The campaign also used simple, powerful statistics to expose the scale of extreme inequality and drive new narratives. The first statistic used for the launch of the campaign was that ‘at the start of 2014, Oxfam calculated that the richest 85 people on the planet owned as much as the poorest half of humanity’.Footnote 17 These simple, stark figures cut through the noise and have been widely repeated and adopted. Oxfam published an updated key statistic in an annual report on economic inequality, published each year ahead of Davos, an elite gathering. Each year the new statistic was widely anticipated and shared, helping to drive the campaign on extreme economic inequality.

Through the combined efforts of many national and global campaigns, the narrative that extreme economic inequality hurts us all, stymies poverty eradication, and results from political and economic choices rather than being an inevitability has been adopted by many. Increasingly, there are specific actions to address it. This includes, for example, action in the United Kingdom on tax havens that enable multinational corporations to avoid paying taxes on profits generated in developing countries, which could, if paid, be used to fund quality healthcare and education. Yet there is still a long way to go to translate words into action at a global level, and Oxfam continues to work with allies on the campaign.

15.4 Narratives in Climate Litigation

You can have the best policy argument, with the best facts and evidence, but in the end it’s the best story that wins.

Aidan Muller, Cast from Clay

Shifting or changing sticky narratives that maintain the status quo requires collaboration and creative collective action at a scale not seen before.Footnote 18 Climate activists working at different levels need to explore together which new narratives have the potential to shift power on this issue. This could be achieved by amplifying existing narratives or forging new ones that connect geographies and realities. Working in collaboration means exploring the ideas that different actors can bring to the table and testing out different approaches to see what resonates with those with whom we want to connect.

In this section, we draw on existing excellent and in-depth analyses of narratives in climate litigation,Footnote 19 along with current climate litigation,Footnote 20 to draw out some common themes within narratives identified as damaging and currently dominant, as well as within positive narratives with the potential to drive change. This body of work provides a solid foundation with which to connect climate litigation with the broader narrative work of the climate movement.

The literature fleshes out the psychological barriers to public support for climate action (Nosek), the relationship of climate action to morals and values (Markowitz and Shariff), the partisan nature of people’s responses to climate action (Peel and Osofsky), and populist narratives on climate change (Hilson). They set out how, by circumventing the partisan political divides that have typically pervaded support for climate action,Footnote 21 litigation and the narratives used in climate change litigation can act as a unifying force in ‘influencing public debate and social norms’.Footnote 22

15.4.1 Damaging Narratives

One pervasive narrative is that climate change is a global phenomenon and, as individuals, everyone is ‘exposed to messages that hold [us] accountable for causing environmental damage as an unintended side effect of [our] behaviour and lifestyle’.Footnote 23 By making every individual responsible in this way, the narrative can have the opposite effect in that no one is truly accountable for the creation of climate change.Footnote 24 As such, the biggest pollutersFootnote 25 are ‘let … off the hook’Footnote 26 for their culpability, as individuals will instead burden themselves with guilt.

A second narrative is the idea that climate change ‘will most negatively affect individuals who live in faraway places [for people living in affluent places], or who will live in the future or both’.Footnote 27 This uncertainty around future time scales can also inspire a form of ‘wishful thinking’Footnote 28 in that individuals hope that the negative impacts of climate change might not be as severe as predicted. This narrative can also be used to reinforce an ‘us vs. them’ mentality, letting one group off the hook whilst ‘othering’ another group that is blamed or ignored.

There are many more – that climate is an elite concern, that climate action is anti-jobs, and the range of local values and beliefs used to undermine collective climate justice action.

15.4.2 Challenging Negative Climate Change Narratives

Litigation in itself can be a key mechanism to combat the climate change narrative that no one is truly accountable. As a result ‘of the adversarial nature of lawsuits and standing requirements, plaintiffs must identify who to blame for a particular action and how that action has harmed them. Thus, lawsuits might be particularly well suited to apportioning blame for climate change, thereby motivating the public to support corrective action’.Footnote 29

The anti-tobacco movement is an example of previous movements that have successfully challenged this narrative of ‘blamelessness’.Footnote 30 The anti-tobacco movement successfully reframed the narrative to suggest that tobacco companies and governments had not only been aware of the risks of smoking but knowingly created these risks.Footnote 31 This narrative can be applied to climate change litigation to support the idea that climate change was intentionally created and therefore constitutes a ‘wrong that demands to be righted’.Footnote 32 Indeed, ‘the public is likely to react more forcefully given that climate change, as with tobacco in the past, has involved governments and industry continuing with the status quo despite long term knowledge of the risks’.Footnote 33 The anti-tobacco movement also successfully framed the narrative that second-hand smoking ‘was claiming innocent lives’Footnote 34 and, as a result, could apportion this blame to tobacco companies and governments. This type of narrative approach can be seen in the ‘knowing deception’ framing of the New York Attorney General’s prosecution of Exxon for deceiving investors about the true cost of climate change and in the framing of the inquiry of the PhilippinesCommission on Human Rights into the responsibility of the Carbon Majors for the human rights impacts of climate change currently happening in the Philippines.

The Youth Climate MovementFootnote 35 and the worldwide striking of school children for climate action have been pivotal in influencing the general public and driving home the reality that climate change will have implications for everyone, everywhere. With respect to climate change litigation, it has been argued that ‘communicators should adopt techniques that increase individuals’ affinity and identification with future generations (for example, focusing specifically on identifiable future others such as one’s children), which can diminish interpersonal distance, decrease social discounting, limit egocentric biases and enhance intergenerational beneficence’.Footnote 36 Global cases that have successfully engaged an ‘innocent victim’ and youth focus include JulianaFootnote 37 and Future Generations.Footnote 38

Whilst the story being told is clearly important, ‘who is doing the communicating’ is equally important, as evidenced above.Footnote 39 Hilson highlights the potential of harnessing some of these approaches, like a narrative style of communication, and bringing cases ‘by a claimant that can be seen as representing the people’.Footnote 40 Climate cases will evoke stronger support when knowledgeable and ‘trusted members of a person’s cultural group’Footnote 41 are heard, ‘who can help to build acceptance of a particular issue through “vouching” for information and showing it fits with the groups pre-existing worldview’.Footnote 42 One can look to Saúl Luciano Lliuya v. RWE, the Carbon Majors petition in front of the Philippines’ Commission on Human Rights, and Union of Swiss Senior Women for Climate Protection v. Swiss Federal Council and Others as examples of climate litigation where the claimants both represent trusted members of a group not easy to dismiss as part of a Northern climate elite bubble and also of cases that tell a very clear story about the impacts of climate change that are happening right now.

Peel and Osofsky also identify the economic case and disaster resilience as positive narratives to develop in order to overcome energy partisanship. Hope, pride, and gratitude are underscored by Markowitz and Shariff as narratives that can generate enthusiasm for climate activism.

Climate litigators, in collaboration with others in the climate movement, can build on this work and draw upon new learning from other activists globally to achieve the most advocacy impact from each climate case filed.

15.5 Learning and Actions for Climate Litigation
  • It’s clear that coordination and collaboration will be key to designing successful climate litigation with strong narrative strategies. Litigation needs to be integrated into national and global climate justice campaigns and movements, so that there’s a shared theory of change and a shared understanding of the key dominant narratives and the new narratives that need to be driven.

  • Climate litigators can join the conversation in Collective Power and Narrative Action. Part I of the book contains a link to sign up for a mailing list to receive part II in an email and invitations to join virtual conversations on different dimensions of narrative power and collective action, including identity, race, climate, filmmaking, fake news, brands, and more. People are also invited to share ideas for topics they would like to talk and learn more about.Footnote 43

  • In designing climate litigation and considering other legal issues, litigators need to consider how the litigation will play in the court of public opinion and which narratives it will help to drive. What story does the framing tell? Who has the legitimacy and trust to tell that story, and how does that relate to the position of the claimant in the case? If an NGO is involved in the case, how are they working with the people directly affected by the issues?

  • Once the litigation is running, like in all climate campaigns, litigators need to draw on creative communications and activism, drawing on the expertise of the full range of people with expertise on narrative change – social scientists, creatives, filmmakers, storytellers, marketing gurus, big data analysts, academics, think tanks, and more. Can visuals, film, art, music, memes, or humour communicate more effectively than more traditional methods?

  • Significant resources are needed to co-create narratives and share the learning on this fast enough and wide enough to secure the greatest impact over the next few years. Existing models for this include JustLabs and Narrative Power and Collective Action. How can funders support access to communications support for litigators? How can litigators collaborate to share channels and resources to drive new narratives?

Footnotes

11 Climate Science and Human Rights Using Attribution Science to Frame Government Mitigation and Adaptation Obligations

1 For an overview, see, among others, the chapters by César Rodríguez-Garavito (Chapter 1), Ben Batros and Tessa Khan (Chapter 3), and Jolene Lin and Jacqueline Peel (Chapter 9) in this volume.

2 Michael Burger et al., “The Law and Science of Climate Change Attribution” (2020) 45 Columbia Journal of Environmental Law 57.

3 Recent proceedings initiated by individual plaintiffs include: “Sacchi et al. v. Argentina et al.,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/sacchi-et-al-v-argentina-et-al/> (CRC petition); “La Rose v. Her Majesty the Queen,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/la-rose-v-her-majesty-the-queen/> (children’s rights); “Maria Khan v. Federation of Pakistan et al.,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/maria-khan-et-al-v-federation-of-pakistan-et-al> (children’s and women’s rights); “ENVironnement JEUnesse v. Canada,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/environnement-jeunesse-v-canadian-government/> (children’s rights); “Kim Yujin et al. v. South Korea,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/kim-yujin-et-al-v-south-korea/> (children’s rights); “Family Farmers and Greenpeace Germany v. Germany,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/family-farmers-and-greenpeace-germany-v-german-government>; “Armando Ferrão Carvalho and Others v. The European Parliament and the Council,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/armando-ferrao-carvalho-and-others-v-the-european-parliament-and-the-council/>; “Future Generations v. Ministry of Environment & Others,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/future-generation-v-ministry-environment-others/>. Recent proceedings initiated by NGOs on behalf of individuals include: Friends of the Irish Environment v. Ireland [2019] IEHC 747, 748 (H. Ct.) (Ir); “Notre Affaire à Tous and Others v. Total,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/notre-affaire-a-tous-and-others-v-total/>; “Friends of the Earth Germany, Association of Solar Supporters, and Others v. Germany,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/friends-of-the-earth-germany-association-of-solar-supporters-and-others-v-germany/>.

4 See “Sacchi et al. v. Argentina et al.,” above Footnote note 3; see also “La Rose v. Her Majesty the Queen,” above Footnote note 3; see also “Maria Khan v. Federation of Pakistan et al.,” above Footnote note 3; see also “ENVironnement JEUnesse v. Canada,” above Footnote note 3; see also “Kim Yujin et al. v. South Korea,” above Footnote note 3.

5 See “Sacchi et al. v. Argentina et al.,” above Footnote note 3.

6 See, e.g., “Commune de Grande-Synthe v. France,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/commune-de-grande-synthe-v-france/> (case filed by a French municipality on behalf of its residents); see also “Rights of Indigenous People in Addressing Climate-Forced Displacement,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/rights-of-indigenous-people-in-addressing-climate-forced-displacement/> (petition to UN Special Rapporteurs filed by Indigenous communities in the US); “Lho’imggin et al. v. Her Majesty the Queen,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/gagnon-et-al-v-her-majesty-the-queen/> (legal challenge filed by an indigenous group alleging that the Canadian government’s approach to climate change has violated their constitutional and human rights); see also “Hearing on Climate Change Before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/hearing-on-climate-change-before-the-inter-american-commission-on-human-rights/> (on the impacts of climate change on the human rights of Indigenous peoples, women, children, and rural communities); see also “Petition to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Seeking Relief from Violations of the Rights of Arctic Athabaskan Peoples Resulting from Rapid Arctic Warming and Melting Caused by Emissions of Black Carbon by Canada,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/petition-inter-american-commission-human-rights-seeking-relief-violations-rights-arctic-athabaskan-peoples-resulting-rapid-arctic-warming-melting-caused-emissions/> (petition alleging that Canada’s fragmentary and lax regulations of black carbon emissions threaten the Athabaskan people’s human rights, including collective Indigenous rights); see also “Petition To The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Seeking Relief From Violations Resulting from Global Warming Caused By Acts and Omissions of the United States,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/petition-to-the-inter-american-commission-on-human-rights-seeking-relief-from-violations-resulting-from-global-warming-caused-by-acts-and-omissions-of-the-united-states/> (petition seeking to hold the United States accountable for violations of individual and collective rights of Indigenous peoples arising from contributions to climate change); see also “A Request for an Advisory Opinion from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights Concerning the Interpretation of Article 1(1), 4(1) and 5(1) of the American Convention on Human Rights,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/request-advisory-opinion-inter-american-court-human-rights-concerning-interpretation-article-11-41-51-american-convention-human-rights/> (discussing the linkages between tribal and Indigenous rights and the right to a clean environment).

7 See “Rights of Indigenous People in Addressing Climate-Forced Displacement,” above Footnote note 6.

8 See “Lho’imggin et al. v. Her Majesty the Queen,” above Footnote note 6.

9 See “Commune de Grande-Synthe v. France,” above Footnote note 6.

10 G.A. Res. 61/295, UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, September 13, 2007.

11 See “Rights of Indigenous People in Addressing Climate-Forced Displacement,” above Footnote note 6. Sacchi et al. v. Argentina et al. also involved alleged violations of the rights of Indigenous youth plaintiffs, but the lawsuit focuses on harms to the individual plaintiffs.

12 See Maximillian Auffhammer et al., “Detection and Attribution of Observed Impacts,” in C. B. Fields et al. (eds.), Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. Part A: Global and Sectoral Impacts. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014), pp. 1005–6.

13 See M. C. Kirchmeier-Young et al., “Attribution of the Influence of Human-Induced Climate Change on an Extreme Fire Season” (2018) 7 Earth’s Future 2 (using an event attribution method and a large ensemble of regional climate model simulations, the authors found that the high fire weather/behavior metrics were made two to four times more likely and that anthropogenic climate change increased the area burned by a factor of seven to eleven).

14 See Greet Jan van Oldenborgh et al., “Attribution of the Australian bushfire risk to anthropogenic climate change” (2021) 21 Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 941(finding that the probability of conditions giving rise to fires increased by at least thirty percent since 1900 as a result of anthropogenic climate change).

15 Confounding factors must be addressed at all levels of attribution research, but it is easier to account for these factors through statistical analysis when looking at impacts on a broader regional and temporal scale.

16 UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, above Footnote note 10 at art. 29.

18 A similar approach has been used to establish standing in some US cases. See, e.g., NRDC v. EPA, 464 F.3d 1 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (granting standing to the NRDC as a member organization based on the probability that at least one of its members would be injured by pollution); see also NRDC v. Wheeler, 955 F.3d 68 (D.C. Cir 2020) (granting standing to NRDC and the state of New York based on the risk of climate-related harm to coastal assets).

19 See Communication to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, Sacchi et al. v. Argentina et al., ¶¶5–10, September 23, 2019, <http://blogs2.law.columbia.edu/climate-change-litigation/wp-content/uploads/sites/16/non-us-case-documents/2019/20190923_Not-available_petition-1.pdf>.

20 See Juliana v. United States, 217 F. Supp. 3d 1224 (D. Or. 2016) (First Amendment Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief), ¶¶ 23–28, 38, 46.

21 Note that in Massachusetts v. EPA, the fact that the state represented the aggregate interests of citizens helped it build a strong case for injury.

22 The government responses in the CRC proceeding are being kept confidential. Our summary of the governments’ arguments are based on the Petitioners’ Reply to those arguments; see UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, Sacchi et al. v. Argentina et al., Petitioners’ Reply to the Admissibility Objections of Brazil, France, and Germany, May 4, 2020, <http://blogs2.law.columbia.edu/climate-change-litigation/wp-content/uploads/sites/16/non-us-case-documents/2020/20200504_Not-available_reply.pdf>.

23 One example of a “high confidence” impact is sea level rise, which clearly poses a risk to coastal property even when accounting for confounding factors such as subsidence and erosion. For a more detailed discussion of impacts and confidence levels, see Burger et al., “The Law and Science of Climate Change Attribution,” above Footnote note 2 at Part II.

24 See “Climate Change and Human Rights” (2015) UN Environment Programme.

25 See, e.g., “Sacchi et al. v. Argentina et al.,” above Footnote note 3; see also “La Rose v. Her Majesty the Queen,” above Footnote note 3; see also “Maria Khan v. Federation of Pakistan et al.,” above Footnote note 3; see also “ENVironnement JEUnesse v. Canada,” above Footnote note 3; “Family Farmers and Greenpeace Germany v. Germany,” above Footnote note 3; “Armando Ferrão Carvalho and Others v. The European Parliament and the Council,” above Footnote note 3; Friends of the Irish Environment v. Ireland, above Footnote note 3; “Notre Affaire à Tous and Others v. Total,” above Footnote note 3; “Friends of the Earth Germany, Association of Solar Supporters, and Others v. Germany,” above Footnote note 3; see also “Lho’imggin et al. v. Her Majesty the Queen,” above Footnote note 6; see “Commune de Grande-Synthe v. France,” above Footnote note 6.

26 See, e.g., “Future Generations v. Ministry of Environment & Others,” above Footnote note 3; see also “Leghari v. Pakistan,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/ashgar-leghari-v-federation-of-pakistan/>; see also “Rights of Indigenous People in Addressing Climate-Forced Displacement,” above Footnote note 6.

27 See “Rights of Indigenous People in Addressing Climate-Forced Displacement,” above Footnote note 6.

28 These elements are closely intertwined and not always treated as separate elements in case documents and decisions (e.g., whether the government has breached its obligation depends on whether its actions will cause injury to human rights). Nonetheless, delineating these elements helps to illustrate how different types of attribution science factor into the resolution of these cases.

29 Foreseeability of harm may also be treated as a separate element in some cases. In the failure-to-mitigate context, the focus is typically on the objective likelihood of harm at the time of the case (i.e., is there reasonable certainty that the government’s failure to control emissions will continue to cause harm if the court does not intervene) and so questions about foreseeability are wrapped up in the analysis of injury and causation. But in the failure-to-adapt context, it may be necessary to show that the government ignored foreseeable risks at some point in the past, in which case the question of foreseeability is separate from the question of whether future harm is probable. See discussion in Section 11.2.

30 Failure-to-mitigate claims have also been filed against private companies, including several cases involving rights-based claims. See, e.g., “Milieu et al. v. Royal Dutch Shell plc.,” Sabin Center For Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/milieudefensie-et-al-v-royal-dutch-shell-plc/>; see also “Youth Verdict v. Waratah Coal,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/youth-verdict-v-waratah-coal/>; see also “Citizens’ Committee on the Kobe Coal-Fired Power Plant v. Kobe Steel Ltd.,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/citizens-committee-on-the-kobe-coal-fired-power-plant-v-kobe-steel-ltd-et-al/>.

31 See “Future Generations v. Ministry of Environment & Others,” above Footnote note 3; see also “Leghari v. Pakistan,” above Footnote note 26; see also Urgenda, above Footnote note 17.

32 See Burger et al., “The Law and Science of Climate Change Attribution”; see also Maria L. Banda, “Climate Science in the Courts: A Review of U.S. and International Judicial Pronouncements” (2020) Environmental Law Institute, <https://www.eli.org/sites/default/files/eli-pubs/banda-final-4-21-2020.pdf>; see also “Union of Swiss Senior Women for Climate Protection v. Swiss Federal Council and Others,” Sabin Center for Climate Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/union-of-swiss-senior-women-for-climate-protection-v-swiss-federal-parliament/>.

33 See, e.g., Juliana, 217 F. Supp. 3d at 1224; see also “Union of Swiss Senior Women for Climate Protection v. Swiss Federal Council and Others,” above Footnote note 32; see also “Armando Ferrão Carvalho and Others v. The European Parliament and the Council,” above Footnote note 3.

34 See Banda, “Climate Science in the Courts,” above Footnote note 32 at 2.

35 See, e.g., Urgenda, above Footnote note 17 (focusing on emissions and carbon budgets); see also “Leghari v. Pakistan,” above Footnote note 26 (focusing on the implementation of existing commitments); see also “Sacchi et al. v. Argentina et al.,” above Footnote note 3 at ¶¶203–36 (illustrating how government obligations can be framed with reference to both domestic emissions and participation in international agreements).

36 “Sacchi et al. v. Argentina et al.,” above Footnote note 3 at ¶29. Note that the precise language regarding the government’s positive obligation to stop climate change will vary depending on the human rights instrument at issue.

37 See, e.g, “Sacchi et al. v. Argentina et al.,” above Footnote note 3 at ¶30. The question of whether emissions impact crosses a threshold of materiality may also appear in cases involving smaller-scale actions, such as specific fossil fuel licensing decisions. See, e.g., Föreningen Greenpeace Norden v. Norway, 18-060499ASD-BORG/3 at 20 (23.01.2020) (Borgarting Lagmannsrett), <http://blogs2.law.columbia.edu/climate-change-litigation/wp-content/uploads/sites/16/non-us-case-documents/2020/20200123_HR-2020-846-J_judgment.pdf> (dismissing petition that sought to enjoin oil and gas licenses because: “[n]either with respect to emissions from combustion after export is it possible to know what emissions the decision will entail, and in any event these will be marginal from a global perspective.”). The question of whether the emissions impact is a “material” or “substantial” contribution to climate change has also arisen in tort cases and rights-based cases involving atmospheric trust claims in the United States. See Burger et al., “The Law and Science of Climate Change Attribution,” above Footnote note 2 at 201, 229.

38 Emissions accounting methodologies may vary depending on the accounting timeframe (e.g., historical/cumulative vs. current emissions) and scope (e.g., territorial vs. consumption vs. extraction emissions). See Burger et al., “The Law and Science of Climate Change Attribution,” above Footnote note 2 at 135.

39 Source and impact attribution research can be used in conjunction to make arguments about what constitutes a “material” contribution – for example, petitioners could seek to quantify the effect of an emissions contribution on sea level rise using existing research – but there is a normative aspect to thresholds of materiality and unreasonableness that is beyond the scope of attribution science.

40 E.g., the Dutch government was found to have breached human rights obligations due to emissions impacts in Urgenda, and the Netherlands’ share of global cumulative CO2 emissions was 0.72 percent as of 2017. See Hannah Ritchie and Max Roser, “CO2 and Greenhouse Gas Emissions,” Our World in Data, <https://ourworldindata.org/co2-and-other-greenhouse-gas-emissions>. Moreover, the emissions at issue in the case were only a proportion of total national emissions (specifically, those attributable to the government’s failure to implement a policy aimed at reducing emissions 25 percent over 1990 levels by 2020).

41 See International Law Commission, Draft Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, with Commentaries, art. 47 at 124–25; cmt 8 at 129 (2001); see also Case Concerning Certain Phosphate Lands in Nauru (Nauru v. Austl.), 1992 I.C.J. 240, 258-59, 262 (June 26).

42 See “Climate Change and Human Rights,” above Footnote note 24 at §§1.2, 2.2.(b)(i), & 2.2.(b)(v).

43 See “Rights of Indigenous People in Addressing Climate-Forced Displacement,” above Footnote note 6.

44 Examples of other factors relevant to this determination include the cost, efficacy, and feasibility of undertaking the adaptation measures sought by petitioners.

45 See discussion of ECtHR cases above (showing that governments have an obligation to prepare for foreseeable hazards, including climatological events, regardless of whether such events can be definitively linked to climate change).

46 See Budayeva and Others v. Russia, App. Nos. 15339/02, 21155/02, 20058/02, 11673/02 and 1543/02, Eur. Ct. H.R. (March 20, 2008).

47 See Kolyadenko and Others v. Russia, Eur. Ct. H.R. (Judgment, February 28, 2012), <https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/sites/eng/pages/search.aspx?i=001-109283>.

48 See Öneryildiz v. Turkey, Eur. Ct. H.R. (Judgment, 2004) at 1, <https://hudoc.echr.coe.int/fre#{%22itemid%22:[%22003-1204313-1251361%22]}>.

49 See “Future Generations v. Ministry of Environment & Others,” above Footnote note 3; see also “Leghari v. Pakistan,” above Footnote note 26.

50 See The Environment & Human Rights, Advisory Opinion OC-23/17, Inter-Am. Ct. H.R. (ser. A), No. 23, <http://www.corteidh.or.cr/docs/opiniones/seriea_23_esp.pdf>.

51 See “Rights of Indigenous People in Addressing Climate-Forced Displacement,” above Footnote note 6.

12 The Evolution of Corporate Accountability for Climate Change

1 Anamaria Deduleasa and Iain Esau “Winning Stakeholders’ Trust a Key Challenge for Oil and Gas Players,” Upstream, February 29, 2020, <https://www.upstreamonline.com/low-carbon/winning-stakeholders-trust-a-key-challenge-for-oil-and-gas-players/2-1-764770>.

2 Adele Peters, “Is It Possible for an Oil Company to Help Fight Climate Change?,” Fast Company, November 1, 2018, <https://www.fastcompany.com/90249937/is-it-possible-for-an-oil-company-to-help-fight-climate-change>.

3 Foote published a paper on the heating effect of carbon dioxide in 1856, although, erroneously, John Tyndall is typically credited with discovering the “greenhouse effect” in a series of experiments and papers starting in 1859.

4 See Svante Arrhenius, “On the Influence of Carbonic Acid in the Air upon the Temperature of the Ground” (1896) 41 Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science 237.

5 See Charles C. Mann, “Meet the Amateur Scientist Who Discovered Climate Change,” Wired, January 23, 2018; see also Spencer R. Weart, The Discovery of Global Warming (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008).

6 See Charles D. Keeling, “The Concentration and Isotopic Abundances of Carbon Dioxide in the Atmosphere” (1960) 12 Tellus 200. Keeling also did readings in Antarctica in 1958 and in La Jolla from 1958 onward.

7 Wallace S. Broecker, Fossil Fuel CO2 and the Angry Climate Beast (New York: Eldigio Press, 2003).

8 See Tom Boden, Bob Andres, and Gregg Marland, “Global CO2 Emissions from Fossil-Fuel Burning, Cement Manufacture, and Gas Flaring: 1751–2014” (2017) US Department of Energy. Oil, gas, and coal emissions in 1896: 419 MtC (97 percent coal); 2018: 9,535 MtC. In 2018, cement totaled 1,507 MtCO2. Updated using data from the Global Carbon Project. This “inconceivable” rise in fossil fuel use roughly parallels economic growth, though carbon emissions have gradually “decoupled” from global GDP growth. CO2 decreased from 0.434 kgCO2 per $GDP in 1990 to 0.328 kgCO2 per $GDP in 2014. “CO2 emissions,” World Bank, <https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/EN.ATM.CO2E.PC> (kg per 2017 PPP $GDP).

9 See Nikayla Jefferson and Leah Stokes, “Our Racist Fossil Fuel Energy System,” Boston Globe, July 13, 2020, <https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/07/13/opinion/our-racist-fossil-fuel-energy-system/>.

10 For the source of the quotation, see Mason Inman, The Oracle of Oil: A Maverick Geologist’s Quest for a Sustainable Future (New York: Norton, 2016).

11 See Richard Heede, “A World Geography of Recoverable Carbon Resources in the Context of Possible Climate Change” (1983) National Center for Atmospheric Research 136.

12 For the source of the quotation, see Ben Franta, “On Its 100th Birthday in 1959, Edward Teller Warned the Oil Industry about Global Warming,” The Guardian, January 1, 2018.

13 See Jule G. Charney et al., “Carbon Dioxide and Climate: A Scientific Assessment” (1979) National Academy of Sciences 33, <https://www.bnl.gov/envsci/schwartz/charney_report1979.pdf>; see also President’s Science Advisory Committee, “Restoring the Quality of Our Environment: Report of the Environmental Pollution Panel” (1965) White House 317; see also William H. Matthews, et al., Study of Man’s Impact on Climate (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1971), p. 308; see also Weart, The Discovery of Global Warming, above Footnote note 5.

14 See, e.g., “Smoke & Fumes: The Legal and Evidentiary Basis for Holding Oil Companies Accountable for Climate Change” (2017) Center for International Environmental Law, < https://www.ciel.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Smoke-Fumes.pdf>; see also Neela Banerjee et al., Exxon: The Road Not Taken (Brooklyn: Inside Climate News, 2015). And for the consummate history of climate deception and disinformation, see Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway, Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming (New York: Bloomsbury, 2010).

15 See Philip Shabecoff, “Global Warming Has Begun, Expert Tells Senate,” New York Times, June 24, 1988.

16 Lee Raymond: “I’m not a U.S. company and I don’t make decisions based on what’s good for the U.S.” Steve Coll, Private Empire: ExxonMobil and American Power (New York: Penguin, 2012).

17 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, Art. 3, Rio de Janeiro, May 9, 1992, 1771 UNTS.

18 See “Climate Change 2014: Synthesis Report, Summary for Policymakers” (2014) IPCC 40.

19 See “Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5°C: Summary for Policymakers of IPCC” (2018) IPCC.

20 See Steven J. Davis et al., “Future CO2 Emissions and Climate Change from Existing Energy Infrastructure” (2010) 329 Science 1330.

21 See Corinne Le Quéré et al. “Temporary Reduction in Daily Global CO2 Emissions during the COVID-19 Forced Confinement” (2020) 10 Nature Climate Change 647; International Energy Agency (2022) Global Energy Review: CO2 Emissions in 2021: Global Emissions Rebound Sharply to Highest Ever Level, IEA, Paris, <https://www.iea.org/reports/global-energy-review-co2-emissions-in-2021-2Climate/Emissions/IEA/IEAGlobalEnergyReviewCO2Mar22.pdf>

22 See “The Emissions Gap Report 2019” (2019) United Nations Environment Programme 81.

23 For brevity, this discussion ignores the rich literature on the nature and implications of responsibility for climate change and consequential burden of action by notable philosophers such as Simon Caney, John Broome, Kathleen Dean Moore, Stephen Gardiner, Dale Jamieson, John Nolt, James Garvey, Henry Shue, Steve Vanderheiden, Kristian Høyer Toft, and Sybille van den Hove. Most of this literature is focused on the individual vs. state moral responsibility, or on ancestral vs. current responsibility, and thus skirts discussion of corporate culpability in general and particularly the major carbon producers (with the exception of Shue and Toft).

24 See Claire L. Fyson et al., “Fair-Share Carbon Dioxide Removal Increases Major Emitter Responsibility” (2020) 10 Nature Climate Change 836.

25 See Pankaj Bhatia et al., “The Greenhouse Gas Protocol: A Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard” (2004) World Resources Institute & World Business Council for Sustainable Development.

26 See Science Based Targets, < https://sciencebasedtargets.org/>; see also aspirational initiatives, e.g., ClimateAction100+, <https://www.climateaction100.org/>; CDP, <https://www.cdp.net/en>; Global Reporting Initiative, <https://www.globalreporting.org/>; see also financial reporting and corporate responsibility groups, e.g., CERES, <https://www.ceres.org/>; Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures, <https://www.fsb-tcfd.org/>. See also “Major Risk or Rosy Opportunity: Are Companies Ready for Climate Change?” (2019) CDP 47.

27 See Jonathan Franzen, “What If We Stopped Pretending? The Climate Apocalypse Is Coming,” New Yorker, September 8, 2019.

28 See David Kiron et al., “Corporate Sustainability at a Crossroads: Progress toward Our Common Future in Uncertain Times” (2020) MIT Sloan & Boston Consulting Group 31.

29 See Climate of Concern (Royal Dutch Shell 1991) (28-minute film); see also “The Greenhouse Effect,” Royal Dutch Shell (1988), p. 91; see also Robert Bradley, “Beyond Petroleum,” BP, 2010; see also John Browne, Stanford University Speech (1997).

30 See Robert J. Brulle, “The Climate Lobby: A Sectoral Analysis of Lobbying Spending on Climate Change in the USA, 2000 to 2016” (2018) 149 Climatic Change 289.

31 Simon Dietz, Dan Gardiner, Valentin Jahn, & Jolien Noels (2021) How ambitious are oil and gas companies’ climate goals? Science, vol. 374:405–408.

32 Dario Kenner and Richard Heede, “White Knights, or Horsemen of the Apocalypse? Prospects for Big Oil to Align Emissions with a 1.5°C Pathway” (2021) Energy Research & Social Science 79, art. no. 102049. <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214629621001420>.

33 Geoffrey Supran, Peter Erickson, Doug Koplow, Michael Lazarus, Peter Newell, Naomi Oreskes, & Harro van Asselt, “Fossil-Fuel Subsidies Must End,” Scientific American, vol. 29(3s), August 2020.

34 See Benjamin Franta, “Early Oil Industry Knowledge of CO2 and Global Warming” (2018) 8 Nature Climate Change 1024.

35 See Peter Frumhoff et al., “The Climate Responsibilities of Industrial Carbon Producers” (2015) 132 Climatic Change 157.

36 CAI is an independent research institute focusing on anthropogenic climate change, dangerous interference with the climate system, the contribution of fossil fuel producers' carbon production to atmospheric carbon dioxide, and the risk and disclosure requirements regarding past and future emissions of greenhouse gases. CAI was founded in 2011.

37 See Richard Heede, “Tracing Anthropogenic CO2 and Methane Emissions to Fossil Fuel and Cement Producers 1854–2010” (2014) 122 Climatic Change 229; see also Richard Heede, Carbon Majors: Accounting for Carbon and Methane Emissions 1854–2010 Methods & Results Report (Sunnyvale: Lambert Academic, 2019), p. 148.

38 See Matthew Taylor and Jonathan Watts, “Revealed: the 20 firms behind a third of all carbon emissions,” The Guardian, October 9, 2019.

39 See Brenda Ekwurzel et al., “The Rise in Global Atmospheric CO2, Surface Temperature, and Sea Level from Emissions Traced to Major Carbon Producers” (2007) 144 Climatic Change 579.

40 See Rachel Licker et al., “Attributing Ocean Acidification to Major Carbon Producers” (2019) 14 Environmental Research Letters 1.

41 Preliminary calculations of estimated land loss attributed to emissions traced to major carbon producers. In the CIESIN database, global SLR of 1 m equates to 421,174 km2 of inundated land; 1 mm equates to ~421 km2. See Richard Heede, “Carbon Producers’ Tar Pit: Dinosaurs Beware” (2017) Institute for New Economic Thinking 16, <https://www.ineteconomics.org/uploads/papers/Heede-PathToAccountability-18Oct17.pdf>.

42 See Michael Burger and Jessica Wentz, “Holding Fossil Fuel Companies Accountable for Their Contribution to Climate Change: Where Does the Law Stand?” (2018) 74 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 397; see also Michael Burger et al., “The Law and Science of Climate Change Attribution” (2020) 45 Columbia Journal of Environmental Law 57.

43 As proposed by Mary Christina Wood and Dan Galpern, “Atmospheric Recovery Litigation: Making the Fossil Fuel Industry Pay for Damages to the Atmosphere from Carbon Pollution” (2015) 45 Environmental Law 259.

44 See Henry Shue, “Responsible for What? Carbon Producer CO2 Contributions and the Energy Transition” (2017) 144 Climatic Change 591.

45 See Shefali Sharma, “Milking the Planet: How Big Dairy Is Heating up the Planet and Hollowing Rural Communities”, IATP, June 29, 2020, <https://www.iatp.org/milking-planet>.

46 Marco Grasso and Richard Heede, “Time to Pay the Piper: Fossil Fuel Companies' Reparations for Climate Damages: A Proposal” (in preparation).

47 See Joanna Setzer and Rebecca Byrnes, “Global Trends in Climate Change Litigation: 2020 Snapshot” (2020) LSE 30. Isabella Kaminski “Indonesian islanders sue cement producer for climate damages,” The Guardian, 20 July 2022. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/20/indonesian-islanders-sue-cement-holcim-climate-damages?

48 See Friederike Otto et al., “Towards an Inventory of the Impacts of Human-Induced Climate Change” (2020) Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society.

49 See Kerry Emanuel, “Why It’s Time to Stop Calling These Hurricane Disasters ‘natural,’” Washington Post, September 19, 2017.

50 Shue, “Responsible for What? Carbon Producer CO2 Contributions and the Energy Transition,” above Footnote note 43 at 591.

51 See “Repsol 2050 Net Zero Emissions Commitment,” Repsol, December 2, 2019, <www.repsol.com/en/press-room/press-releases/2019/repsol-will-be-a-net-zero-emissions-company-by-2050.cshtml>.

52 See “BP Sets Ambition for Net Zero by 2050, Fundamentally Changing Organisation to Deliver,” BP, February 6, 2020, p. 11; see also Mike Coffin, “BP’s Net Zero Ambition: Deciphering the Code,” Carbon Tracker Initiative, February 14, 2020, <https://carbontracker.org/bps-net-zero-ambition/>.

53 See “Shell’s Ambition to Be a Net-Zero Emissions Energy Business,” Royal Dutch Shell, April 16, 2020, <www.shell.com/energy-and-innovation/the-energy-future/shells-ambition-to-be-a-net-zero-emissions-energy-business.html>; see also Katherine Dunn, “Shell Becomes the Largest Global Energy Company to Commit to a Net-Zero Emissions Goal by 2050,” Fortune, April 16, 2020, <https://fortune.com/2020/04/16/net-zero-emissions-shell-oil-industry-gas/>; See also “Eni’s strategy against climate change,” Eni, <https://www.eni.com/en-IT/net-zero/strategy-climate-change.html>.

54 See “Equinor’s Climate Roadmap: Equinor Sets Ambition to Reduce Net Carbon Intensity by at Least 50% by 2050,” Equinor, February 6, 2020, p. 23, <https://www.equinor.com/en/how-and-why/climate.html>.

55 Dietz et al., “How Ambitious Are Oil and Gas Companies’ Climate Goals?” Science, 2021, 374:405–408, above Footnote note 31; Kenner and Heede, “White Knights, or Horsemen of the Apocalypse?” note 32 above.

56 See Amory Lovins, “Reinventing Fire: Bold business solutions for the new energy era” (2011) Rocky Mountain Institute.

57 See Myles Allen, “Liability for Climate Change”(2003) 421 Nature 419; see also Myles R. Allen et al., “The Case for Mandatory Sequestration” (2009) 2 Nature Geoscience 813.

13 Providing Evidence to Support Strategic Climate Enforcement and Litigation

* Appeals Counsel, Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) of the International Criminal Court, and Founder and Chairperson of CCCA. The views expressed in this chapter are not necessarily those of the OTP.

1 See ‘Measuring Digital Development: Facts and Figures’ (2019) ITU <https://www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Statistics/Documents/facts/FactsFigures2019.pdf>.

2 See Witness, <https://www.witness.org/>.

3 See EyeWitness, <https://www.eyewitness.global/>.

4 See Bellingcat, <https://www.bellingcat.com/>.

5 See Amnesty International: Citizen Evidence Lab, <https://citizenevidence.org/>.

6 See RightsCon, <https://www.rightscon.org/>.

7 See Eurojust & Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, “Documenting international crimes and human rights violations for criminal accountability purposes – Guidelines for civil society organisations”.

8 See ‘Number of Social Network Users Worldwide from 2010 to 2023’, Statista, <https://www.statista.com/statistics/278414/number-of-worldwide-social-network-users/>.

9 See Center for Climate Crime Analysis (CCCA), <http://www.climatecrimeanalysis.org/>.

10 See ‘Special Report on Climate Change and Land: Summary for Policymakers’ (2020) IPCC.

11 See ‘Justice for Forests: Improving Criminal Justice Efforts to Combat Illegal Logging’ (2012) The World Bank 2, Footnote n. 2, and Footnote n. 10.

12 See C. Nellemann et al. (eds.), ‘A Rapid Response Assessment: Green Carbon, Black Trade – Illegal Logging, Tax Fraud and Laundering in the World’s Tropical Forests’ (2012) UNEP-INTERPOL 6, 13, and 49; see also C. Nellemann et al. (eds.), ‘The Rise of Environmental Crime: A Growing Threat to Natural Resources, Peace, Development and Security’ (2016) UNEP-INTERPOL 51.

13 Doug Boucher, ‘How Brazil Has Dramatically Reduced Tropical Deforestation’ (2014) 5 The Solutions Journal 66.

14 See Mapbiomas, <http://alerta.mapbiomas.org/>.

15 See Nellemann et al. (eds.), ‘The Rise of Environmental Crime’, above Footnote note 11.

16 See ‘Treasury Sanctions Corruption and Material Support Networks’, US Department of the Treasury, 9 December 2019, <https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm849>.

17 See ‘Unilever Launches €1bn Climate and Nature Fund, Targets Net-zero Emissions by 2039’, Edie, 14 June 2020; see also ‘Investor Statement on Deforestation and Forest Fires in the Amazon’, CERES, <https://www.ceres.org/sites/default/files/Investor%20statement%20on%20deforestation%20and%20forest%20fires%20in%20the%20Amazon.pdf>.

14 The Case for Climate Visuals in the Courtroom

1 Juliana v. United States, 947 F.3d 1159 (9th Cir. 2020).

2 The United Nations Human Rights Council appointed Mr. Alston as the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights in June 2014. See “Mr. Philip Alston,” United Nations Human Rights, <https://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Poverty/Pages/PhilipAlston.aspx>; see also “Philip Alston,” NYU Law, <https://its.law.nyu.edu/facultyprofiles/index.cfm?fuseaction=profile.biography&personid=19742>.

3 See “UN Expert Condemns Failure to Address Impact of Climate Change on Poverty,” United Nations Human Rights, <https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=24735&LangID=E>; see also Report of the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, “Climate Change and Poverty,” UN Doc A/HRC/41/39, June 25, 2019, <https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/3810720>.

4 Paris Agreement to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, Art. 2, 1(a), December 12, 2015, TIAS No. 16-1104.

5 The science shows that staying well below 1.5°C, with a return to 350 ppm/1°C or less by the end of the century, will be necessary to avoid irreversible feedbacks in the climate system. See James Hansen et al., “Young People’s Burden: Requirement of Negative CO2 emissions” (2017) 8 Earth System Dynamics 577; see also Ben Haley et al., “350 ppm Pathways for the United States” (2019) Evolved Energy Research, <https://static1.squarespace.com/static/571d109b04426270152febe0/t/5cd3a78f11ee7700012c74a3/1557374885630/350+PPM+Pathways+for+the+United+States.pdf>.

6 See ‘“We Will Show You Their Own Films’: Film at the Nuremberg Trial,” US Holocaust Memorial Museum, <https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/we-will-show-you-their-own-films-film-at-the-nuremberg-trial>. For information on the screengrab from the documentary film, see Nazi Concentration and Prison Camp (shown at the Nuremberg Trials, November 29, 1945). The image, taken at the Nordhausen Slave Labor Camp, shows a man being freed and evacuated for treatment in Allied hospitals. Found at 25 minutes 50 seconds. To watch the full documentary played during the trials, see “Nazi Concentration Camp – Film Showed at Nuremberg War Crimes Trial,” YouTube, March 13, 2013, <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_pQJ42ONPDo&t=191s&bpctr=1589919377>.

7 The Department of Defense originally requested the film footage for the potential Military Tribunal. Hollywood film director George Stevens assembled the graphic Allied footage from the liberation of twelve camps in Austria, Belgium, and Germany: Leipzig, Penig, Ohrdruf, Hadamar, Breendonk, Hannover, Arnstadt, Nordhausen, Mauthausen, Buchenwald, Dachau, and Belsen. The six reels, lasting approximately two hours, reflected 6,000 feet of the 80,000 feet shot by the Americans and British cameramen during the liberation of the camps. See John J. Michalczyk, “Film as Visual Documentation at the Nuremberg Trials,” in Filming the End of the Holocaust: Allied Documentaries, Nuremberg and the Liberation of the Concentration Camps (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2014), pp. 65112.

8 For more information on the use of film footage in the Nuremberg trials, see Footnote ibid.

9 Individuals can make a difference by reducing their personal greenhouse gas emissions. The Earth Institute at Columbia University outlines thirty-five simple changes. See Renee Cho, “The 35 Easiest Ways to Reduce Your Carbon Footprint,” Earth Institute at Columbia University, December 27, 2018, <https://blogs.ei.columbia.edu/2018/12/27/35-ways-reduce-carbon-footprint/>.

10 Unlike the Holocaust-era images showing piles of corpses, unfathomable injuries, and skeletal human beings almost dead from starvation that easily convey acute horror, the ecological and human rights impacts caused by climate change tend to progress in slow motion. Watching climate change affect our world is similar to watching a child grow. A parent who is with their child daily will not notice the child’s slow, incremental growth. A grandparent, on the other hand, that only gets to see their grandchild once a year finds the child’s changes obvious and stark. Similarly, it may be impossible to see the shoreline eroding until – one day – a storm made more severe by climate change washes the homes – now closer to the water – away.

11 See Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, <https://climatecommunication.yale.edu/>.

12 See “Our Mission,” George Mason University Center for Climate Change Communication, <https://www.climatechangecommunication.org>.

13 The EIS team places cameras on glaciers, in forests, and underwater at coral reefs. The cameras take one photo every hour, yielding approximately 8,000 frames per camera, per year. EIS then combines these images into compelling, time-lapse videos that reveal how climate change transforms large regions of our planet. For more information, see “Extreme Ice Survey – a program of Earth Vision Institute,” EIS, last accessed 17 September 2020 <http://extremeicesurvey.org/>; and watch Chasing Ice and Chasing Coral, available for screening via different platforms depending on the region. For the US access, see Netflix. For more information, see Chasing Ice, <https://chasingice.com/>; and Chasing Coral, <https://www.chasingcoral.com/>.

14 See Climate Visuals, <https://climatevisuals.org/>; see also Climate Outreach, <https://climateoutreach.org/>.

15 See Maria L. Banda, “Climate Science in the Courts: A Review of U.S. and International Judicial Pronouncements” (2020) Environmental Law Institute, <https://www.eli.org/sites/default/files/eli-pubs/banda-final-4-21-2020.pdf>.

16 Juliana v. United States, 947 F.3d 1159 (9th Cir. 2020).

18 See Banda, “Climate Science in the Courts,” above Footnote note 15 at 10.

19 This chapter focuses on how visual documentation can be leveraged to demonstrate environmental harm and the violation of human and constitutional rights. This chapter does not address how visuals could be used to help prove other aspects of rights-based climate cases (e.g., what governments knew, legislative displacement, redressability). However, legal teams could certainly introduce visuals to support these aspects of a case as well.

20 See United States v. Feather River Lumber Co., 23 F.2d 936 (N.D. Cal. 1928); see also Feather River Lumber Co. v. United States, 30 F.2d 642 (9th Cir. 1929).

21 See A´I Cofán de Sinangoe v. El Ministerio de Minería, La Agencia de Regulación y Control Minero (ARCOM), El Ministerio del Ambiente (MAE), La Secretaría Nacional del Agua (SENAGUA), La Procuraduría General del Estado (PGE) [October 22, 2018] Sala Unica de la Corte Provencial de Justicia de Sucumbíos, Juicio No: 21333201800266.

22 Also known as the Cayambe-Coca National Park, this protected area is located along the Equator, about twenty-four miles from the capital city of Quito. The park encompasses an area of 996,090 acres.

23 For more information about the A’i Kofan and their groundbreaking monitoring and legal efforts, visit the websites for Alianza Ceibo, an Indigenous-led Ecuadorian organization working toward the defense of Indigenous territory, cultural survival, and the building of viable solutions-based alternatives to rainforest destruction at <https://www.alianzaceibo.org>; and for Amazon Frontlines, an organization that defends Indigenous rights to land, life, and cultural survival in the Amazon rainforest at <https://www.amazonfrontlines.org/>.

24 In addition to presenting visual evidence in court, field visits were conducted for both the regional and provincial hearings, bringing the judges and legal teams to the mining area. With the use of the drone and 3D goggles, the judges were able to see in real time the impacts of mining on the land and the river.

25 See A´I Cofán de Sinangoe v. El Ministerio de Minería, La Agencia de Regulación y Control Minero (ARCOM), El Ministerio del Ambiente (MAE), La Secretaría Nacional del Agua (SENAGUA), La Procuraduría General del Estado (PGE), above Footnote note 22.

26 The precautionary principle is a general principle of environmental and international law. It provides that if there is a strong suspicion that a certain activity may have environmentally harmful consequences, it is better to pause the activity, review the scientific evidence, and determine what measures could be put in place to avoid the hazardous and often irreversible impacts before allowing the activity to go forward.

27 See Republica del Ecuador, Constituciones de 2008, October 20, 2008, Title II, Ch. One, Art. 10, <https://pdba.georgetown.edu/Constitutions/Ecuador/english08.html>.

28 To learn more about the legal and non-legal strategies utilized by the Kofan, see A’I Kofan, <https://www.alianzaceibo.org/alianza/aikofan/>; and Amazon Frontlines, <https://www.amazonfrontlines.org/chronicles/>.

29 See Kichwa v. Ecuador, Merits, Reparations and Costs, Judgment, ¶ 58, Inter-Am. Ct. H.R. (ser. C) No. 245 (June 27, 2012).

30 PETROECUADOR (the State Oil Company) and a consortium made up of Compañía General de Combustibles S.A. (“CGC”) and Petrolera Argentina San Jorge S.A. have agreed to a contract for the “exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbons in Block No. 23.” The consortium is commonly referred as “CGC,” and Block No. 23 is 200,000 hectares and includes territory held by the Sarayaku, Jatun Molino, Pacayaku, Canelos, Shami, and Uyumi communities with the Sarayaku holding around 65 percent of the block. See John Kelly, “Kichwa Indigenous People of Sarayaku v. Ecuador” (2017) 40 Loyala of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review 1469.

31 See Mario Melo, “Sarayaku before the Inter-American Human Rights System: Justice for the People of the Zenith and their Living Forest” (2019) Dejusticia, <https://www.dejusticia.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Sarayaku-before-the-Interamerican-Human-Rights-System.pdf>.

32 See Videotape: Soy Defensar de la Selva (Eriberto Gualinga 2002), <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnLvVNsUmnY&t=13s>, helicopter landing from 5 min. 23 sec. to 6 min. 46 sec.

33 See Footnote ibid., the community explaining to CGC employees is not welcome on Sarayaku land, from 6 min. 46 sec. To 7 min. 53 sec.

34 See Footnote ibid., the peaceful nature of the camps from 13 min. 38 sec. to 14 min. 19 sec.

35 See Footnote ibid., blocking of and checkpoints on the river from 8 min. 2 sec. to 8 min. 48 sec.

36 See Footnote ibid., damage to the environment from 10 min. 46 sec. to 11 min. 04 sec.

37 A carbon sink is an area of forest [or other ecosystems] that is large enough to absorb large amounts of carbon dioxide from the Earth’s atmosphere and therefore reduce the effect of global warming. See “Carbon Sink,” Cambridge Dictionary, <https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/carbon-sink>.

38 See Kichwa v. Ecuador, Merits, Reparations and Costs, Judgment, ¶ 58, Inter-Am. Ct. H.R. (ser. C) No. 245, (June 27, 2012).

40 See Kanuk v. Alaska Dept. of Nat. Resources, 335 P.3d 1088 (Alaska 2014). See also Constitution of Alaska, Art. VIII, §§ 1, 2, 3, 4 and 6. The constitutional public trust doctrine provides that the state holds public trust resources, including, but not limited to, waters (surface, subsurface, and atmospheric), fish, wildlife, air (atmosphere), the climate system, the sea and the shores of the sea, submerged and submersible lands, beaches, forests, grasslands, grasslands, and tundra in trust for public use.

41 See Kanuk v. Alaska Dept. of Nat. Resources, 335 P.3d at 1091.

42 Standing is the determination of whether a specific person, group of persons, or organization is the proper party to bring a particular matter to court for adjudication. In many judicial systems, this means that the plaintiff must show they were, or are likely to be, “sufficiently and personally injured” as a result of a legal wrong. In the United States, a plaintiff must show that they have suffered an “injury-in-fact” that is “traceable to the challenged action of the defendant,” where the court can provide redress with a favorable decision. See Lujan v. National Wildlife Fed’n, 110 S. Ct. 3177 (1990).

43 Julia Olson, Executive Director and Chief Legal Counsel for Our Children’s Trust and Lead Counsel for Juliana v. United States.

44 Declaration of Standing, Nelson Kanuk (August 2011) for Kanuk v. Alaska Dept. of Nat. Resources, 335 P.3d 1088 (Alaska 2014).

45 See “Stories of Trust Calling for Climate Recovery: TRUST Alaska (Our Children’s Trust, WITNESS, & iMatter 2011), <https://www.ourchildrenstrust.org/short-films>.

47 An amicus curiae brief is a written submission to a court in which an amicus curiae (literally a “friend of the court”: a person or organization who/which is not party to the proceedings) can set out legal arguments and recommendations in a given case. ‘Amicus Curiae Brief,’ ECCHR, <https://www.ecchr.eu/en/glossary/amicus-curiae-brief/>.

48 Kanuk v. Alaska Dept. of Nat. Resources, 335 P.3d at 1098.

49 Sagoonick v. State of Alaska, 503 P.3d at 805; Our Children’s Trust at <https://www.ourchildrenstrust.org/alaska>.

50 Sagoonick, 503 P.3d at 805.

51 See Cheryl L. Grady et al., “Neural Correlates of the Episodic Encoding of Pictures and Words” (1998) 95 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2703.

52 See “American Society of International Law: Keynote & Address by Justice Stephen Breyer,” YouTube, April 5, 2016, <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UB6GrD3zl-Q&feature=emb_logo>, at 46 min. 15 seconds.

53 See S. O’Dea, “Number of Smartphone Users Worldwide from 2016 to 2021,” Statista, August 20, 2020, <https://www.statista.com/statistics/330695/number-of-smartphone-users-worldwide/>.

54 At the time of writing, examples of satellite imagery providers include but are not limited to: Airbus Geostore; Bing Maps; Eagleview; Google Earth Engine and Google Earth Pro; HERE WeGo Satellite; Hexagon Geospatial; Landsat 8; Mapbox Satellite Live; Maxar Imagery Mosaics; MODIS, NAIP; Nearmap Orthographics; Newarmap; OpenAerialMap; Planet Basemaps; Sentinel-2; Vexcel Imaging; and Zoom.Earth. See @mouthofmorrison, Twitter, January 2, 2020, 3:59 pm, <https://twitter.com/mouthofmorrison/status/1212840820019208192/photo/1>.

55 See Michael E. Heintz, “The Digital Divide and Courtroom Technology: Can David Keep up With Goliath?” (2002) 54 Federal Communications Law Journal 567.

56 See “Bushfire Survivors for Climate Action Incorporated v. Environment Protection Authority,” Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, <http://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/bushfire-survivors-for-climate-action-incorporated-v-environment-protection-authority/>. On April 20, 2020, Bushfire Survivors for Climate Action brought a civil enforcement proceeding to compel the New South Wales Environmental Protection Authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. The plaintiffs, represented by the New South Wales Environmental Defenders Office, are Australians who allege that they have been harmed by bush fires made likely or more intense by climate change. According to news reports, the case was brought under the New South Wales Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997, which requires the Environmental Protection Authority to “develop environmental quality objectives, guidelines and policies to ensure environment protection.”

57 See Cody Melissa Godwin, “How to Find Stricken Kangaroos in Australian Wildfires,” BBC, March 3, 2020.

58 King of the Netherlands, “Speech on King Willem Alexander on National Remembrance Day,” May 4, 2020, <https://www.royal-house.nl/documents/speeches/2020/05/04/speech-by-king-willem-alexander-national-remembrance-day-4-may-2020>.

15 The Story of Our Lives Narrative Change Strategies in Climate Litigation

* The authors would like to thank Isabel Crabtree-Condor, knowledge broker at Oxfam and coordinator of Narrative Power and Collective Action, and James Turner of Glimpse Collective for their generous sharing of time and expertise to inform this chapter.

1 Isabel Crabtree-Condor, Narrative Power and Collective Action (Oxford: Oxfam, 2020), p. 12.

3 Lisa Cron, Wired for Story: The Writer’s Guide for Using Brain Science to Hook Readers from the Very First Sentence (New York: Random House, 2012).

4 See Crabtree-Condor, Narrative Power and Collective Action, above Footnote note 1.

6 Lissy C. Friedman et al., ‘Tobacco Industry Use of Personal Responsibility Rhetoric in Public Relations and Litigation: Disguising Freedom to Blame as Freedom of Choice’ (2015) 105 American Journal of Public Health 250, 250.

7 ‘Narrative Change: A Working Definition (And Some Related Terms)’ (emphasis in original), The Narrative Initiative, 15 May 2019.

8 ‘Framing 101’, Frameworks Institute, <https://www.frameworksinstitute.org/tools-and-resources/framing-101/>.

9 ‘Narrative Change: A Working Definition (And Some Related Terms)’ (emphasis in original), above Footnote note 7.

10 ‘What Is a Narrative?’, The Narrative Initiative, <https://narrativeinitiative.org/what-is-narrative/>.

12 See Krizna Gomez and Thomas Coombes, Be the Narrative: How Changing the Narrative Could Revolutionize What It Means to Do Human Rights (Oxford: Just Labs & Fund for Global Human Rights, 2019).

13 See Rachel Weidinger, ‘Four Baskets: Necessary Capacities for Narrative Change’, The Narrative Initiative, 30 July 2020.

14 Isabel Crabtree-Condor, ‘Elena Mejía Julca: The Creative Activist’, On Think Tanks, 28 October 2020.

16 See ‘Even It Up: Time to End Extreme Inequality’ (2014) Oxfam, <https://www-cdn.oxfam.org/s3fs-public/file_attachments/cr-even-it-up-extreme-inequality-291014-en.pdf>.

18 See Crabtree-Condor, Narrative Power and Collective Action, above Footnote note 1.

19 See Kim Bouwer, ‘Lessons from a Distorted Metaphor: The Holy Grail of Climate Litigation’ (2020) 9 Transnational Environmental Law 1; see also Ezra M. Markowitz and Azim F. Shariff, ‘Climate Change and Moral Judgment’ (2012) 2 Nature Climate Change 243; see also Jacqueline Peel and Hari M. Osofsky, ‘A Rights Turn in Climate Litigation?’ (2018) 7 Transnational Environmental Law 37; see also Grace Nosek, ‘Climate Change Litigation and Narrative: How to Use Litigation to Tell Compelling Climate Stories’ (2018) 42 William and Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review 733; see also Chris Hilson, ‘Climate Populism, Courts and Science’ (2019) 31 Journal of Environmental Law 395.

20 See Joana Setzer and Rebecca Byrnes, ‘Global Trends in Climate Litigation: 2020 snapshot’ (2020) Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment.

21 See Hari M. Osofsky and Jacqueline Peel, ‘Energy Partisanship’ (2016) 65 Emory Law Journal 695, 695.

22 Nosek, ‘Climate Change Litigation and Narrative’, above Footnote note 19 at 737.

23 Markowitz and Shariff, ‘Climate Change and Moral Judgment’, above Footnote note 19 at 244.

24 See Nosek, ‘Climate Change Litigation and Narrative’, above Footnote note 19 at 791.

25 See Paul Griffin, ‘The Carbon Majors Database: CDP Carbon Majors Report 2017’ (2017) Carbon Disclosure Project.

26 Mary Annaise Heglar, ‘I Work in the Environmental Movement. I don’t Care If You Recycle.’, Vox, 4 June 2019.

27 Anthony Leiserowitz et al., ‘Climate Change in the American Mind: Americans’ Global Warming Beliefs and Attitudes in May 2011’ (2011) Yale University & George Mason University.

28 See Jacqueline Peel and Hari M. Osofsky, Climate Change Litigation: Regulatory Pathways to Cleaner Energy (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015), p. 52.

29 Nosek, ‘Climate Change Litigation and Narrative’, above Footnote note 19 at 754–55.

30 See Markowitz and Shariff, ‘Climate Change and Moral Judgment’, above Footnote note 19 at 244.

31 Nosek, ‘Climate Change Litigation and Narrative’, above Footnote note 19 at 766.

32 Markowitz and Shariff, ‘Climate Change and Moral Judgment’, above Footnote note 19 at 243.

33 Hilson, ‘Climate Populism, Courts and Science’, above Footnote note 19 at 395–98.

34 Nosek, ‘Climate Change Litigation and Narrative’, above Footnote note 19 at 791.

35 See, e.g., Global Climate Strike, <https://globalclimatestrike.net/>.

36 Markowitz and Shariff, ‘Climate Change and Moral Judgment’, above Footnote note 19 at 245.

37 See Juliana v. United States, 46 ELR 20175 (D.Or. 2016).

38 See Corte Suprema de Justicia [C.S.J.] [Supreme Court], Sala de Casación Civil, abril 5, 2018, M.P.: L.A. Tolosa Villabona, Expediente 11001-22-03-000-2018-00319-01 (Colom.).

39 Chad J. McGuire and Devon LynchCompeting Narratives of Climate Change’ (2017) 19 Environmental Practice 218.

40 Hilson, ‘Climate Populism, Courts and Science’, above Footnote note 19 at 89.

41 Osofsky and Peel, ‘Energy Partisanship,’ above Footnote note 21 at 723.

43 See Crabtree-Condor, Narrative Power and Collective Action, above Footnote note 1.

Figure 0

Figure 12.1 Global CO2 emissions from fossil fuel use, cement production, and flaring, 1890

Figure 1

Table 12.1 Operational and product emissions attributed to the top twenty major carbon producers, 1965–2020

Figure 2

Figure 12.2 The arc of CAI’s work from attributing emissions to carbon producers, modeling their impact on the global climate, and contributing to efforts to hold companies accountable for climate damages

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  • Beyond the Law
  • Edited by César Rodríguez-Garavito, New York University
  • Book: Litigating the Climate Emergency
  • Online publication: 10 November 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009106214.014
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  • Beyond the Law
  • Edited by César Rodríguez-Garavito, New York University
  • Book: Litigating the Climate Emergency
  • Online publication: 10 November 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009106214.014
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  • Beyond the Law
  • Edited by César Rodríguez-Garavito, New York University
  • Book: Litigating the Climate Emergency
  • Online publication: 10 November 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009106214.014
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