Byย Lorraine Chow, EcoWatch. Reposted with permission from EcoWatch.
A newย reportย highlights the significance of theย Paris climate agreementย in pushing global climateย action.
All of the 197 signatories of the landmark accord now have at least one national law or policy onย climate change, an analysis published Monday by the London School of Economics (LSE)ย found.
Theย Global trends in climate change legislation and litigation: 2018 snapshotย shows there are now more than 1,500 national climate change laws and policies worldwide, with 106 introduced since the Paris agreement was signed in Decemberย 2015.
โOf the 106 new laws and policies passed since the Paris agreement was reached, 28 explicitly reference the agreement,โ the report states. โFurther analyses will be required to determine if these new laws and policies are consistent with the Paris agreement and countries’ nationally determined contributions. Alignment between national and international goals will be pivotal to meeting the Parisย targets.โ
All 197 countries, nations & territories that have signed or ratified the Paris Agreement now have at least 1 national law or policy on climate change https://t.co/aKgLKEMwVY pic.twitter.com/AoacVtvKFr
โ Grantham LSE (@GRI_LSE) April 30, 2018
The report, from researchers at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the ESRC Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy at LSE, was released Monday as representatives of 193 governments meet at the two-weekย Bonn Climate Change Conferenceย in Germany. The summit is aimed at increasing global action to cut carbon emissions and speeding up progress on the Paris agreement to keep global temperature rise this century well belowย 2ยฐC.
The report’s authors pointed out, โThe ability to import internationally declared targets into actionable national laws and policies, and to translate those targets into action, will have a great impact on the success of the Parisย agreement.โ
Also in the analysis, the researchers identified โa new waveโ ofย climate change-related lawsuitsย and a number of โstrategicโ cases that โcould have significant impact in holding governments and greenhouse gas emitters accountable for climateย change.โ
The are now about 1,000 of climate-related lawsuits, with some cases focused on forcing courts to rule on the consistency of countries’ actions with the Paris agreement. For instance,ย Greenpeaceย Nordic and theย Nature and Youthย environmental groupย sued Norway in November. The plaintiffs alleged that the government is contravening the Paris agreement and has failed to abide by its constitutional obligation to safeguard the environment for futureย generations.
According to the LSE report, more than 800 of the 1,000 climate-related cases stem from the U.S., including roughly a dozen lawsuits filed directly against the Trump administration’s rollbacks of climateย regulation.
President Trump, whoย does not believeย in climate change and is ramping up development in fossil fuels, controversially announced his intention withdraw from the Paris agreement, making the U.S.ย the only signatory in opposition.
U.S. cases also include efforts fromย San Francisco,ย Oaklandย andย New York Cityย that have filed lawsuits against major fossil fuel companies, allegingย they knewย about the threat of climate change for decades but concealed information aboutย it.
On the other hand, the researchers also determined that in the U.S., โindustry, conservative NGOs and others have brought suits to support climate change deregulation, reduce climate protections generally or at the project level, and target climate protectionย supporters.โ
Main image:ย The Eiffel Tower is illuminated in green to celebrate Paris Agreement’s entry into force. Credit:ย U.S. Department of State, publicย domain
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