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.