Climate activists are increasingly going to court against energy groups. In a momentous and controversial judgment, a Dutch court ordered the energy group Shell to reduce its CO2 emissions. Tens of thousands of residents of the Niger Delta have also sued Shell in Great Britain. In Germany, a lawsuit is pending before the Higher Regional Court of Hamm, brought by a Peruvian farmer who demands that the energy group RWE compensate him for the threat that a melting glacier poses to his house in the Andes.
In an interview, Marc-Philippe Weller, Director of the Institute for Comparative Law, Conflict of Laws and International Business Law at the University of Heidelberg, analyses these and other climate actions. He concludes that model cases fulfil an important sensitising function but that only politics can provide a comprehensive solution.
Topics
European Data Summit 2026 – Enforce. Simplify. Build.
Background and Analysis on the 2026 FIFA World Cup in the United States
Deepening the partnership at the 11th EU-Korea Summit
100 days of the Kast government in Chile
Charged climate ahead of the Local Government Elections: Xenophobic violence in South Africa is on the rise
You need to sign in in order to comment.