Article: The Hague District Court’s Judgment in the ‘Climate Case of the Century’: How a Dutch Court Fell Through the Cellar Hatch (Part 1)

Q3 Social Sciences
L. Bergkamp
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

To protect the inhabitants of The Netherlands against ‘dangerous climate change’, the Hague District Court (the ‘Court’) in the ‘climate case of the century’ (Milieudefensie v. Shell, 2021) resorted to paradoxical lex ferenda interpretations of Dutch tort law. The court found binding ‘unwritten’ corporate norms in documentation without any legal status, while it acknowledged that the corresponding multitude of demanding ‘written’ (i.e., statutory) norms are nonbinding, do not apply to private entities, and do not reflect custom. In dictating corporate climate policymaking, the court rewrote Dutch tort law, ignored its limits, and expanded it in ways that are not consistent with the Dutch Supreme Court’s rulings. Based on the proposition that CO2 emissions cause ‘dangerous’ climate change, which is not a term used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the judgment is a lengthy, but in the end circular argument: there is a duty of care because emission cause danger, and emissions cause danger because there is a duty of care. Milieudefensie’s case was built chiefly on a Dutch tort law case known as the ‘Cellar Hatch’ case. In the Cellar Hatch case, the Dutch Supreme Court first articulated the endangerment doctrine that resembles Learned Hand’s negligence calculus. In Milieudefensie v. Shell, the Hague District Court applied the endangerment doctrine, but constructed a climatespecific version. To enforce the urgent CO2 emission reductions deemed scientifically necessary, the Court circumvented the logical consequences of the applying the Cellar Hatch’s endangerment doctrine by referring to human rights, consensus and the concept of ‘partial responsibility’. The judgment does not fit into the system of Dutch civil law, and reasons away all barriers to imposition of the remedy sought by Milieudefensie, including causation requirements. With the Court’s moral reconstruction of the endangerment doctrine to ‘save the planet’, the Court opened the hatch, and fell into the dark cellar, along with the entire body of Dutch tort law, democracy, the rule of law, the rights and interests of citizens and the economy. In short, based on court-made ‘unwritten’ law, the Court concocted a result-oriented mix of science, law and expanded ‘soft laws’ to find an unlawful act without duly considering its plausible lawfulness and justification, entertained a vague, multi-faceted concept of climate-related damage without carefully examining its coherence, and constructed a causal link between the act and the damage based on the act’s presumed unlawfulness. Ironically, given the way markets work, the court’s judgment may well increase CO2 emissions, and thus not have any favourable effect on the climate, but it will restrict citizen’s rights to participate in public affairs and impose a potentially large burden on the economy. Endorsing perceived consensus around a moral imperative to reduce emissions, the Court did not confirm, but merely assumed the effectiveness of the remedy and ignored its multiple adverse consequences. The reality is that to comply with the court order, in 2030, Shell could simply spin off its fossil fuel business. Regrettably, the court disposed of virtually the complete body of Dutch law to secure a pyrrhic victory for the climate movement that is likely to harm the environment. This article is published in two parts. This is part 1. Part 2 will be published in the next issue of European Energy and Environmental Law Review. Milieudefensie v. Shell, climate change, climate litigation, civil liability, tort law, customary law, duty of care, causation, public-private law interface, concept of damage, trias politica, interest balancing, legal culture
文章:海牙地区法院对“世纪气候案”的判决:荷兰法院如何跌入谷底(上)
为了保护荷兰居民免受“危险的气候变化”的影响,海牙地区法院(“法院”)在“世纪气候案”(Milieudensie诉Shell,2021)中对荷兰侵权法采用了自相矛盾的拟议法解释。法院在没有任何法律地位的文件中发现了具有约束力的“不成文”公司规范,同时承认相应的大量要求苛刻的“书面”(即法定)规范不具有约束力,不适用于私人实体,也不反映习俗。在决定企业气候政策时,法院改写了荷兰侵权法,忽视了其限制,并以与荷兰最高法院裁决不一致的方式扩大了其范围。基于二氧化碳排放导致“危险”气候变化这一命题(这不是政府间气候变化专门委员会(IPCC)使用的术语),这一判断是一个冗长但最终是循环的论点:有注意义务,因为排放会导致危险,排放会造成危险,因为有注意义务。Milieudensie的案件主要建立在荷兰侵权法案件“Cellar Hatch”的基础上。在Cellar Hatch案中,荷兰最高法院首次阐明了类似于Learned Hand疏忽计算的危害原则。在Milieudensie诉壳牌案中,海牙地区法院适用了危害原则,但构建了一个针对气候的版本。为了强制执行科学上认为必要的紧急二氧化碳减排,法院通过提及人权、共识和“部分责任”概念,规避了适用Cellar Hatch危害理论的逻辑后果。该判决不符合荷兰民法体系,并排除了实施Milieudensie寻求的补救措施的所有障碍,包括因果关系要求。随着法院对“拯救地球”的危害学说进行道德重建,法院打开了闸门,与荷兰侵权法、民主、法治、公民权益和经济的整个体系一起陷入了黑暗的地窖。简言之,在法院制定的“不成文”法律的基础上,法院炮制了一种以结果为导向的科学、法律和扩大的“软法律”的组合,在没有充分考虑其合理合法性和正当性的情况下认定非法行为,在没有仔细审查其一致性的情况下来接受了气候相关损害的模糊、多方面的概念,并基于该行为的推定非法性,构建了该行为与损害之间的因果关系。具有讽刺意味的是,考虑到市场的运作方式,法院的判决很可能会增加二氧化碳排放,从而对气候没有任何有利影响,但它将限制公民参与公共事务的权利,并给经济带来潜在的巨大负担。法院认可了关于减少排放的道德义务的共识,但没有证实,只是假设了补救措施的有效性,并忽视了其多重不利后果。现实情况是,为了遵守法院的命令,壳牌可以在2030年简单地剥离其化石燃料业务。令人遗憾的是,法院几乎处理了荷兰的全部法律,以确保气候运动取得代价高昂的胜利,这可能会损害环境。这篇文章分两部分发表。这是第1部分。第2部分将发表在下一期的《欧洲能源与环境法评论》上。Milieudensie诉壳牌,气候变化,气候诉讼,民事责任,侵权法,习惯法,注意义务,因果关系,公私法律接口,损害概念,trias politica,利益平衡,法律文化
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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