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Friday, June 26, 2015

USA: Teens win interim lawsuit in climate change case in Washington State


On Tuesday in Washington State King County Superior Court Judge Hollis Hill issued a judgement ordering the Washington Department of Ecology to reconsider a citzen petition on rulemaking for greenhouse gas reductions according to the best available science.

The petition (PDF) was brought by eight children and their legal guardians for a Department rule to recommend to the State Legislature an effective emissions reduction trajectory that is based on best available climate science, and will achieve safe atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide by 2100.

The petition for rule making was lodged with the Ecology Department in June 2014, but was denied by the Department in August 2014, which provided no argument disputing the scientific arguments in the children's petition. The Children lodged an appeal which was heard by Judge Hollis.

Their petition recommended that Washington’s minimum statewide greenhouse gas emissions limits should be updated according to the best available climate science for climate recovery to achieve a four percent annual reduction in overall carbon dioxide emissions in the state so that a target of 31 per cent reduction is achieved by 2020, 62 percent reduction by 2035, and 80 percent reduction by 2050.


“The effect of this decision is that for the first time in the United States, a court of law has ordered a state agency to consider the most current and best available climate science when deciding to regulate carbon dioxide emissions,” said Andrea Rodgers of the Western Environmental Law Center, attorney for the youth petitioners. “The court directed Ecology to apply the agency’s own findings that climate change presents an imminent threat to Washington and demands immediate action. The ball is now in Ecology’s court to do the right thing and protect our children and future generations.”

The petitioners clearly stated that The State of Washington has a constitutional obligation to protect and manage its natural resources for its citizens under the Public Trust Doctrine, taking into account the Washington Constitution. Under the Greenhouse Gas Emission Limits Statute the Ecology Department are required to make recommendations and the rule for limiting greenhouse gas emissions according to the best available science.

Judge Hill explained her plain reasoning for rejecting Department of Ecology’s plan to delay action, referencing a December 2014 report from Ecology:

"Ecology suggests no change in greenhouse gas reduction standards until after an international climate conference scheduled in Paris in December 2015, thus delaying action for at least a year from the date of the report or one year and five months after the report’s original due date. Neither in its briefing nor in oral argument of this appeal did the Department seek to justify this suggested delay. The report itself states that after the Paris conference Washington would be better informed how the state’s limits should be adjusted."

The youth petitioners were able to bring the case with the help of Our Children's Trust, an Oregon-based nonprofit engaged in a youth-driven wide legal campaign to establish the right to a healthy atmosphere and stable climate.

“This is a decision of immense national significance,” said Julia Olson, executive director of Our Children’s Trust, the nonprofit spearheading similar cases around the country. “Judge Hill acknowledges the urgent and dire acceleration of global warming, refuses to accept any more bureaucratic delay, and mandates that the State consider and act in just two weeks time on the youth’s scientific evidence that atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide must be reduced to 350 ppm. This judge understands the role of the judiciary to enforce citizen’s rights to fair evaluation of their grounded petitions and the critical urgency that government act substantively and without delay to protect the state’s resources and the children who depend on them.”

One of the petitoners, 13 year old Zoe Foster said of the decision, “Kids understand the threats climate change will have on our future. I’m not going to sit by and watch my government do nothing. We don’t have time to waste. I’m pushing my government to take real action on climate, and I won’t stop until change is made."

Zoe is already an accomplished environmental advocate and believes that climate change should be taught to the youth in school. She is a member of the Plant-For-The-Planet club at school, participating in planting days and beach cleanups, helped make props at an Earth Day march for children, trained other students as Ambassadors for Climate Justice, and met with
legislative staff from the Washington government on climate change. Zoe has already engaged in public education on the risks and impacts of climate change speaking to the City Council Energy and
Environment Committee and at the Governor’s CLEW hearings in Seattle and Olympia, the
Keystone XL vigil, the Climate Reality Project NW retreat, and rallies at the EPA and Army
Corps of Engineers.

The Court ordered that the Department of Ecology reconsider it's denial of the Youth petition for Rulemaking, and that the Department report back to the court no later than July 8, 2015 on whether it intends to amend or affirm it's decision regarding the youth petition. If the decision is to amend, then the court will set a status conference for continued hearing of the case.

The ruling may give more impetus for Washington Governer Jay Inslee to take action as well, after the state legislature failed to pass his climate package.

The successful win in court comes a day before a Dutch district court ruled in favour of nearly 900 Dutch citizens who sued the Netherlands Government to increase emissions to a level supported by the best scientific advise. The court ordered the Government should cut emissions a minimum of 25 percent by 2020 in accordance with IPCC recommendations for industrial countries.

In early June several Pacific Island Nations threatened legal action against the major carbon polluting entities, both country-owned and investor-owned corporations.



TRUST: The Climate Kids from Our Children's Trust on Vimeo.



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