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French court gives govt 9 months to boost climate action By Am�lie BOTTOLLIER-DEPOIS, St�phane ORJOLLET Paris (AFP) July 1, 2021 France's top administrative court on Thursday gave the government a nine-month deadline to take "all the necessary steps" to reach its targets on climate change or face possible sanctions. The Council of State said France was currently unlikely to meet its goal of reducing emissions by 40 percent by 2030 compared with 1990 levels. Ruling on a case brought by the northern coastal town of Grande-Synthe, it ordered Prime Minister Jean Castex to take "all the necessary steps to curb greenhouse gas emissions" by March 31, 2022. The deadline falls in the final weeks of campaigning in France's presidential election, meaning that Emmanuel Macron, who is expected to seek a second term, will be under intense scrutiny on an issue shaping up as a key theme in the vote. If at the end of the nine-month period the council considers the government to still be falling short, it could impose hefty fines. Former environment minister Corinne Lepage, who represented Grande-Synthe in the case, hailed the ruling as "historic." "The noose is tightening on the government," the Affaire du Siecle (Case of the Century) campaign group, which includes Oxfam France and Greenpeace France, tweeted. - Growing climate activism - "The government takes note of this decision and reiterates its determination to reinforce its climate actions, by accelerating emission reductions even more," Castex's office said in a statement. Paris, which takes over the EU presidency in January, is pushing for new legal framework for the bloc that would toughen emission restrictions for the industrial, transport and aviation sectors. Financial aid for the purchase of electric or hybrid cars and the nationwide rollout of vehicle charging stations will also speed up France's emissions reductions, Castex's office said. The government had already promised earlier this week to do more, saying it would announce this autumn "complementary measures allowing us to fulfil our goals." Despite his 2017 promise to "make our planet great again" -- a swipe at former US president Donald Trump, a global-warming denier -- Macron has been criticised for failing to meet France's targets under the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change. In 2018, popular climate campaigner Nicolas Hulot quit as Macron's environment minister over what he saw as the president's failure to take sufficient action on climate change. The case lodged by Grande-Synthe, a town of 23,000 people built on land reclaimed from the sea that risks being flooded by rising ocean levels, is part of a mounting drive by activists worldwide to use courts to pressure governments into action. In a February ruling that was also hailed as historic by campaigners, a Paris court found the state liable for its failure to take sufficient measures to meet its climate targets and ordered it to pay a symbolic one euro in damages. - Covid-related gains - France's High Council on Climate, an independent body tasked with advising the government on reducing emissions, has repeatedly warned that the government is falling short despite a steep drop in emissions last year linked to the coronavirus pandemic. In a report Tuesday, the High Council said that "because of the delays accumulated by France" the annual pace of emissions reductions needed to "practically double" -- to at least 3.0 percent from 2021 and to 3.3 percent on average from 2024 on. In 2019, emissions fell by 1.9 percent and last year they dropped 9.2 percent, an exceptional figure linked to the recession caused by the Covid-19 crisis. The State Council, which rules on disputes over public policies, had already weighed in on the government's climate strategy in November. At the time, it gave the government three months to explain how it intended to meet its objectives.
Climate lawsuit litigants are relying on dated science, study finds Washington DC (UPI) Jun 28, 2021 The lawyers litigating climate-related lawsuits aren't keeping up with the science, according to a new survey, hindering their ability to hold governments and corporations accountable. The new research, published in the journal Nature Climate Change, highlights the disconnect between progress in the field of climate science and the legal, economic and political efforts to slow climate change. The overwhelming majority of climate scientists agree that the evidence of human-caused climate ... read more
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