民事法庭能拯救气候吗?民事法庭上的战略性气候变化诉讼

Astrid Stadler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气候变化是一个紧迫的全球性问题,各国立法机构必须加大力度,大幅减少二氧化碳排放。个人和非政府组织已向国际法院(主要是欧洲人权法院)和一些宪法法院提起针对国家立法者的公法诉讼,指控其侵犯宪法权利和人权。最近,民事法庭也开始受理气候变化诉讼。2021 年,荷兰法院就一个非政府组织对荷兰皇家壳牌集团提起的诉讼作出裁决,认为壳牌公司有义务大幅减少二氧化碳排放量。这一判决以《荷兰民法典》的一般侵权规定为依据,引发了德国法院的类似诉讼浪潮。在非政府组织的支持下,个人原告起诉私营公司,要求赔偿损失或立即减少排放的此类案件是 "战略诉讼 "的典范,其目的是在个案范围之外带来广泛的社会变革。文章分析了其中的政治含义,探讨了一般侵权法是否是解决气候变化问题的合适工具,并讨论了民事法庭如何处理这些案件。气候变化是一个复杂的、多方利益相关者的问题,需要一个平衡社会、法律和经济利益的艰难过程--这是民主合法化议会的任务,而主要不是法院的任务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Can Civil Courts Save the Climate? Strategic Climate-change Litigation Before Civil Courts
Climate change is an urgent global problem, and national legislatures must enhance their efforts to reduce carbon dioxide emissions drastically. Individuals and NGOs have filed public law actions against national legislators before international courts (prominently the ECHR) and several constitutional courts to allege violations of constitutional and human rights. In a more recent development, civil courts too are being seized with climate‑change litigation. In 2021, a Dutch court ruling on an action by an NGO against the Royal Dutch Shell Group held that Shell is obliged to reduce its CO2 emissions considerably. This judgment, based on the Dutch Civil Code’s general tort regulations, has triggered a wave of similar actions before German courts. Such cases of individual plaintiffs, supported by NGOs, suing private companies for damages or for an immediate reduction of emissions are examples of ‘strategic litigation’ aimed at bringing about broad societal changes beyond the scope of the individual case at hand. The article analyses the political implications, tackles the question of whether general tort law is a suitable instrument to address the climate‑change problem, and discusses how civil courts may handle these cases. Climate change is a complex, multi-stakeholder issue that requires a difficult process of balancing social, legal, and economic interests – which is the task of democratically legitimised parliaments, not primarily a task of courts.
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