Numerous climate trials have emerged in the world since the 2000s and have multiplied, including in Europe since 2015. They bear witness to a trend towards polycentric climate governance which is no longer limited to the framework of UN negotiations.Footnote 1 In this evolving context, the courts cannot be an exception to this expansion of forums for discussion and climate governance. This form of approaching the fight against climate change, which is more collaborative—because it involves new alliances between actors (NGOs, citizens, local communities)—nevertheless shows a “pathological” aspect of climate law: Either its absence, its inadequacy, or, in general, its maladjustment to the climate emergency.Footnote 2 In order to fill these voids or to respond to growing demands from civil society, a paradigm shift is occurring through the courts in an attempt to crystallize a right of access to climate justice.Footnote 3
Several possible definitions of climate disputes coexist. The broadest is that which includes any remedy in which its object, de facto or de jure, is linked to climate change. Here we will retain a more restricted definition whereby climate change is the subject of direct appeal or is used as a central argument.Footnote 4 While climate litigation is multi-faceted and remedies can be sought against the climate policies of States or against companies, the present study will focus in particular on claims relating to the demand for climate responsibilities from the public administration and the recognition of more effective climate change laws and climate policies. This article seeks to show the role of courts and climate litigation in advancing and promoting the definition of a legal climate regime. By looking at recent developments of climate litigation in France, we will explore them through both specific French Law and a comparative analysis with other climate justice developments around the world.Footnote 5
The recent legislative and policy developments in France are a very good example of the interrelationship between the evolution of case law and the progress made in climate change legal regime. Our main purpose in studying French case law is to show that the recent developments are a good example for shedding light on emergent dynamics between law, policy making, and legal actions brought by civil society. Analyzing French case law enables us to underline the background of a number of important legislative courses of action towards the progressive recognition of a climate emergency. The two main cases examined in this article reflect this interplay and the potential positive synergy between case law and legislation. This new scenario in France could be the beginning of a polycentric approach to climate governance.
It is useful to situate these case law developments in a global context. In recent months, “climate emergency” declarations have been multiplying in different StatesFootnote 6 and citiesFootnote 7 as well at the European UnionFootnote 8. France is no exception and the French National Assembly has voted to declare a state of climate and ecologicalFootnote 9 emergency following a motion for a resolution. Likewise, a climate resilience bill has just been published on August 22 to deal with the climate emergency. At the same time, the opportunity to include the “climate priority” in the French Constitution was missed. The fact remains, however, that several new climatic remedies are sketching out interesting avenues. The purpose of this article is thus to show different pathways, methods, and conceptual solutions taken in France and Europe to underline the importance of fighting against climate change in the courts.Footnote 10
The year 2021 marked a milestone for climate justice around the world. With nearly twenty cases resolved during the year and more than 150 recent appeals, the phenomenon—which was still in the minority until 2015—saw its numbers explode. What about in France? The latest legislative developments show that the climate issue has taken on an unexpected but deserved scale. After the Citizen’s Convention for the Climate and its 149 proposals, the announcement made by President Macron of an “unfiltered” resumption of these proposals in a law was followed by two bills—one on climate and resilience, the other on constitutional reform. If, for a large part of environmentalist doctrine and for many environmental activists, these bills were far from sufficient and did not take up in their entirety, or in their literality the proposals of the Convention, it must be recognized that the question of the climate emergency has been taken seriously by government and lawmakers, to say the least. The litigation activity, meanwhile, does not have to be ashamed either, with two major climate cases in progressFootnote 11. These developments, both legislative and judicial, clearly show the great dynamism that is being deployed in France around the climate issueFootnote 12. However, can we conclude that these two dynamics have contributed to improving the fight against global warming and facing the climate emergency? If so, in what way?
Some recent legal developments illustrate as well a tendency and progress in this direction. On one hand, “climate emergency” has nourished, even indirectly, new judicial developments in climate litigation. We think here at the Affaire de Grande Synthe before the Administrative High Court (Conseil d’Etat) that we will analyze and develop further in these pagesFootnote 13. On the other hand, some legal concepts, already present in the French legal system, but initially thought for other matters—as, for example, ecological prejudice and civil liability—have recently been successfully used to fight climate emergency before the courts. In this group, the Affaire du Siècle Footnote 14 is the most advanced example of this trend. This case law will also be presented and further analyzed in this article.
It is useful also to briefly recall some French contextual elements related to climate change recent developments.Footnote 15 After the publication of the annual report issued by the High Council for the Climate in June 2019—which critically underlined the fact that France was falling far short of its ambitions in terms of greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction—it became apparent that the goal of carbon neutrality, although announced by the government since 2018, was far from becoming a political achievement, and even less so from being reflected in a legally binding text. Yet the Act on Climate and Energy—after nearly nine months of tough negotiations—was published on November 9, 2019.Footnote 16 Whilst it was initially designed as a “small law,” with only five Articles, over the months it became a law with 69 Articles. Beyond the fact that it sets out a certain number of energy objectives for France, including a final objective of “carbon neutrality” by 2050, the law sets in stone the issue of climate emergency by determining, in Article L100-1 A of the Energy Code, that “a law will determine the targets and establishes the priorities for action of the national energy policy to meet the ecological and climate emergency”Footnote 17.
In spite of these advances, NGOs on the one hand, and the youth mobilized for the climate on the other, as well as a large part of the academic community, are wondering how these legislative objectives will be enforced and how they will be linked to the wave of climate litigation that now seems unavoidable given that it is already well under way.Footnote 18 This two-fold dynamic draws our attention by being both international—in the form of the Paris Agreement negotiationsFootnote 19—an established dialogue between different domestic courts concerning climate justice, and cross-border—in the form of a dialogue between litigants. This is our main point and this article will focus on the analysis and discussion around these different dynamics.
In order to better show these different evolutions and dynamics, and understand the links between them and the progress made, this article is organized around the following steps. First, this article will discuss—by outlining new legal boundaries—the question of the development of a judicial component of the Climate Justice focused on the notion of “climate obligation,” in order to see how climate emergency—through its litigation dimension—enables a legal climate regime to move forward. Second, we will present a view to consider, subsequently, how the question of the “urgency to act” also exerts an influence on the law. Third, we will present the emergency of “climate vulnerabilities” at stake as well as new judicial developments. Fourth, as part of judicial innovations, it is also interesting to observe how we moved from “climate emergency to climate priority,” through the example of the Grande Synthe Case. Fifth and finally, it is important to underscore how using more classical legal concepts for “new climate” purposes is a fruitful path to respond to climate emergency. This can be observed within the example of the concept of “ecological prejudice” in the Affaire du siècle case.Footnote 20
A. Towards a Concept of “Climate Obligation in Times of Emergency”
Whilst the Paris AgreementFootnote 21 on Climate Change does not contain any legal obligations as such, it does, however, introduce a virtuous dynamic whereby States develop national contributions that can be reviewed every five years, setting out their reduction targets and their GHG accounting method. Thus, while their legal nature is still not very precise, these obligations go beyond mere statements of “soft law.” However, this process of establishing climate obligations should be regarded as a dynamic in itself, linking international and national law, case law on the subject, and some texts that could be described as “soft” law but are in the process of becoming “hard” law. Against this background, many States have embarked on a legislative process in order to get their act together with the final objective of the Agreement—to remain well below 2°C of global temperature compared to 1990 levels, and preferably within +1.5°C. This is an internationally binding target, as it is part of the Agreement ratified by more than 196 countries. Furthermore, the issue with keeping within this threshold, and if possible within +1.5°C, has been recalled by the international experts at the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) on a number of occasions this year.Footnote 22 The 2019 French Act on Climate and Energy contains several objectives that are in line with the Agreement. Nonetheless, the whole question that arises at present is that of determining the legal nature of these objectives. Are they legally binding? Do they involve absolute obligations or obligations of conduct? A number of court cases clearly show how difficult it is to enshrine a climate obligation that includes both precise results and a range of means to achieve them. Consequently, the process of developing this new concept is complex and incomplete.
There is currently a long path towards the establishment of a climate obligation in the form of positive legal obligations. While this may even constitute a new general principle of law in some countries, in others, such obligations stem from rights of a diverse nature.
Therefore, as a kind of “model,” the Urgenda Footnote 23 appeal decision of October 2018 affirmed the existence of two types of general climate obligations: one relating to the duty of care, under national law (in this case the Civil Code and the Constitution), and the other to international human rights law, as contained in Articles 2 and 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).Footnote 24 The latter argument paves the way for future legal actions that can be brought on these fundamental rights. Such is the case in Ireland, where the High CourtFootnote 25 ruled that a right to an environment consistent with human dignity and the well-being of citizens is an essential condition for the fulfilment of all human rights. The decision stated that this right was not so much “utopian” and that it would become enforceable once it had been realized through the definition and delineation of specific rights and obligations. The Court dismissed the appeal but held that Article 15 of the Constitution creates a climate obligation.Footnote 26 In the same vein, but targeting a private actor, an application was filed in the Netherlands in May 2019 by the environmental group Milieudefensie suing Shell. The claim alleges that Shell’s contribution to climate change violates its human rights obligations and duty of care under Dutch law.Footnote 27 The Plaintiffs asked the court in The Hague to compel Shell to reduce its CO2 emissions by forty-five percent by 2030, and to reduce them to zero by 2050, in accordance with the Paris Agreement. In this action, the Plaintiffs broadened their duty of care argument to include private companies, claiming that, in light of the Paris Agreement objectives and scientific evidence, Shell has a duty to take measures aimed at reducing its greenhouse gas emissions. The May 26 decision agrees with the NGO and accepts the responsibility of the company for non-compliance with its duty of care towards consumers concerning the reduction obligations of greenhouse emissions in their scopes 1, 2 and even 3.Footnote 28
In France, the legal action before the Administrative Court of Paris instituted by the Affaire du siècle in March 2019 aims to affirm the existence of a general climate obligation on the part of public authorities. This obligation, which does not yet exist, would be the basis for the failure to act which is thus reproached to the State. The court is asked to rule on a general principle of law which would operate as the legal basis for this obligation. To that end, the action underlines the rights and duties included in the Charter of the Environment—in particular, Articles 1 and 2 concerning the right to live in a healthy environment and the duty to conserve the environment. If the French courts are faced with a completely new task because of this ambitious appeal, other case law relating to positive obligations in the field of air pollution can be brought forward. The Council of State has already held that the State had an obligation to observe and enforce air quality levels in accordance with the 2008 Directive on ambient air quality and cleaner air for Europe.Footnote 29 The CJEU then ruled in October 2019 that France had breached its absolute obligations under the Directive.Footnote 30 At the same time, the Court has had to rule on the issue in several actions brought by private individuals against the Administration on the grounds of State responsibility for inaction and wrongful failure to comply with air quality thresholds.Footnote 31 In the February 3, 2021 Affaire du siècle decision, the Tribunal Administratif of Paris ruled, in a preliminary ruling judgment, partially in favor of the requesting NGOs.Footnote 32 The court accepted the responsibility of the State for faulty deficiency due to its inaction, and for having caused ecological damage due to the alteration of the atmosphere, but only for the period between 2015 and 2018.Footnote 33 We will develop in detail the decision on the question of extending the concept of ecological damage to the climate in the following points of this article.
Before going further with the French cases, it is important to compare what happened in France with other countries. In this respect, it is useful to recall that, in the United Kingdom, attempts have been made to assert climate obligations on the part of the State and private actors, but without success.Footnote 34 One such example is the Plan B Earth complaint, which brought a legal action against the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industry Strategy on the grounds that the UK Government had breached the Climate Change Act of 2008 by failing to review a target for carbon reduction by 2050 in light of new international law and scientific developments. The application was dismissed on appeal as well,Footnote 35 which led to the inference that the courts considered the obligations under the Paris Accord to be “non-binding.”
Nonetheless, not all hope is lost with regards to the recognition of climate obligations. In February 2020, a group of German youth filed a legal challenge to Germany’s Federal Climate Protection Act (“Bundesklimaschutzgesetz” or “KSG”), arguing that the KSG’s target of reducing GHGs fifty-five percent by 2030 from 1990 levels was insufficient. The complainants alleged that the KSG therefore violated their human rights as protected by the Basic Law, Germany’s constitution. On April 29, 2021, the Federal Constitutional Court struck down the parts of the KSG as incompatible with fundamental rights for failing to set sufficient provisions for emissions cuts beyond 2030. The Court found that Article 20a of the Basic Law obliges the legislature to protect the climate and aim towards achieving climate neutrality. The judges accepted the arguments that the Climate law must follow a carbon budget approach to limit warming to well below 2°C and, if possible, to 1.5°C. The Court found that that Law had not proportionally distributed the budget between current and future generations. The Court ordered the legislature to set clear provisions for reduction targets from 2031 onward by the end of 2022.Footnote 36
As a result of those different decisions, we can observe that a climate obligation is emerging from a plethora of case law, based on various foundations. On one hand, these foundations draw on a specific legislative mandate, along the lines of the Paris Agreement. On the other, they draw on fundamental rights, as well as already existing climate laws, considered insufficiently ambitious. We can then see how a general climate obligation emerges, slowly.
Further climate obligations may also result from even more specific and sectoral requirements as for instance those used in the Environmental Impact AssessmentsFootnote 37.
B. Moving Towards the “Emergency to Act”: Judiciary Developments on Climate Impacts Assessment Cases in France
Four alarmist scientific reports on the present and future effects of climate change on the ecosystem and our societies were published recently.Footnote 38 All four reports stress the underestimated nature of the impacts of human activities on the climate, biodiversity and the ecosystem, and similarly stress the impacts of climate change on our social systems. The reports also acknowledge the urgency for humanity to both reduce GHG emissions and adapt to future climate change. Moreover, 2021 is the year of the new IPCC report, which urges action in the face of the irreversible progress of global warming.Footnote 39
Yet, and despite those declarations and reports about the necessity of “urgent action,” climate governance experiences difficulties fitting this emergency in the political agendas, at least in a binding fashion. In the latest example to date, the European Parliament adopted a resolution on November 28, 2019 that acknowledges the strong link between scientific expertise and the diplomatic and legal response that should follow, recalling that the current citizen commitment calls for “greater collective ambition and swift action in order to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement.”Footnote 40 Climate emergency has indeed become the basis of a judicial activism that calls also for “short-term” action by challenging the so-called “climaticide” projects (those having negative effects on the atmosphere and the normal functioning of the climate system) within an extensive use of Environmental Impacts Assessment.Footnote 41
Aiming to take more rapid action on the causes of climate change—for example, GHG emissions linked to projects—judicial activism is also emerging and growing in France.Footnote 42 In other countries, the cases are numerous, and courts do not deal with them in the same manner, particularly with regards to the question of the causal link between global warming and local emissions from projects.
In France, the challenge of those projects also relies on the inadequacy of the Environmental Impact Assessment regarding the foreseeable environmentalFootnote 43 and climate effects.Footnote 44 The new field of climate action was foreseeable, as the scope of the facilities likely to directly or indirectly generate GHGs subject to an impact study prior to their administrative authorizations is relatively broad.Footnote 45 Nevertheless, it is only at the beginning. The climate emerged for the first time in the content of the impact study at the end of 2011,Footnote 46 being identified as one of the “factors likely to be significantly affected by the project,”Footnote 47 with the impact study having to consider “the significant impacts of the project on the climate and the project’s vulnerability to climate change.”Footnote 48 It is worth noting that the climate will only be studied if impacts—either direct or indirect—are significant. This inclusion in the legislation is crucial. In the context of some big projects for the construction or modification of major infrastructures, especially transportation—as, for example, in France the Notre-Dame-des-Landes airport project. Footnote 49 In this case, the claimants pointed out, among other things, the shortcomings of the impact document accompanying the application for authorization of the road construction program “on the consideration of climate change.” Yet, in light of the legislation in force, the court simply dismissed this argument.Footnote 50
At present, two decisions are of interest. In February 2019, the Administrative Court of Cergy dismissed an application for summary proceedings brought by the municipality of Sinnamary, requiring the court to cancel the authorization for drilling permits in French Guiana that had previously been awarded to Total by the Prefect of French Guiana.Footnote 51 The municipality alleged, in particular, that the impact study on the effects of drilling on the climate was inadequate—an issue that was not discussed by the court hearing the application for summary proceedings.Footnote 52 In another context, it must also be underlined the case concerning the extension of the Charles de Gaulle International Airport in Paris and the construction of a Mold and a Train Station in the same neighborhood. This case concerned the authorization given by the administrative authorities for the creation of the ZAC (a joint development zone) of the Triangle de Gonesse, the natural and agricultural area next to the current Charles de Gaulle Paris International airport.Footnote 53 Here, although the court did not directly address the issue of climate change, it nevertheless found several shortcomings in the impact study directly related to climate change factors. All those cases enlighten the emerging and urgent question of the need to include the study of the effects and consequences on the climate and the atmosphere as a legal obligation in the Environmental Impact Assessments before any industrial, energetic, commercial or transportation field activity.
At present, climate impacts are therefore not yet identified by French courts as quantitative data to be linked to national climate commitments.Footnote 54 Rather, they are linked to the information that the authorities need to make their decision, without the court being able to interfere with the administrative authorities’ discretionary power.Footnote 55 Nonetheless, one might hope that the increase in scientific knowledge regarding the links between macro and microclimate and the administrative authorities’ climate commitments will lead to the development of this type of argument, thus underlining the urgency of acting against certain projects. Furthermore, climate is being introduced into the administrative culture—even if only timidly. For instance, in the case of the expansion of the Charles de Gaulle Paris International Airport (Gonesse affaire cit.), the French National Commission for Public Debate pointed out that “the State did not justify the discrepancy identified by the participants concerning the increase in air traffic and France’s climate commitments.”Footnote 56 It seems then that there is still a long way to go before it becomes mandatory to include climate change in the Environmental Assessments and to induce substantial changes in this aspect of climate change regime law.
C. The Emergency of New Climate Vulnerabilities at Stake
At the same time, in the litigation brought and the various pre-litigation procedures, there is a demand for anticipatory and preventive State action, which is growing in response to the urgent need to adapt to the consequences of climate change.Footnote 57
It was also the urgency to provide for adaptation measures given their special vulnerability that partly underpinned the petition lodged by sixteen children against Argentina, Brazil, France, Germany, and Turkey for violating the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. They argued that there is a “duty to cooperate at the international level to address the global climate emergency” as a means of protecting the human and children’s rights enshrined in the Convention,Footnote 58 as well as the duty of States to “ensure intergenerational equity for children and the future.”Footnote 59 The petitioners called on the Committee to urge States to step up their efforts to mitigate and adapt to climate change, to take coordinated international action to put in place binding and enforceable climate measures, and to guarantee the right of children to be heard in all efforts to mitigate or adapt to the climate crisis.
It was also from the perspective of urgency for action that the Human Rights Committee received the petition from the Torres Strait Islanders (Australia) alleging violations resulting from State inaction on climate change, based on a violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.Footnote 60 Australia had been the subject of a previous recommendation by the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights stating that a State that fails to adopt adequate measures to effectively address climate change is in breach of the Covenant. The Committee had already recommended that Australia should take immediate measures to tackle the increase in domestic GHG emissions.Footnote 61 The petitioners allege that Australia’s inadequate action on climate change has infringed their human rights. This complaint alleges that these violations are linked to inadequate funding for defense, resilience, and adaptation measures.
In France, the Grande-Synthe case exemplifies the slow but certain progress that climate change litigation is doing in that field. This case shows the importance of taking seriously climate risks assessment in public policies and the law. The Grande Synthe case was brought before the Council of State by the city of Grande Synthe (in the north of France by the sea) and its mayor in 2019. It was an appeal questioning the legality of measures taken by the administration in climatic matters. In particular, the State was accused of not having respected the carbon budgets established in the National Low Carbon Strategy (a legal text that plans the number of emissions in France by year and by groups of 4 years). The applicants considered that the climate policies carried out by the State were not consistent, on the basis of this text, with the climate emergency. The Council of State issued a first decision on November 19, 2019, in which the applicants were partially vindicated and in which the text at issue was identified as having a mandatory scope. The decision was confirmed on July 1, 2021.
This case constitutes indeed a new and important step in French climate change litigation concerning climate vulnerabilities and climate risks. Those risks and vulnerabilities were never brought before in court and were not taken seriously by a court until this case was brought up.
The Grande Synthe case, was launched with the filing of expedited expert report proceedings in March 2019 before the High Administrative Court (Conseil d’Etat) with a view to appointing an expert whose mandate would be to anticipate climate risks by identifying them. The purpose of this mandate would be to “protect the territory of the municipality from changes in the climate situation,” with the report having to “assess the risks of damage associated with climate change on its territory as well as the structures, works and measures that may be undertaken in order to prevent or mitigate the occurrence of such damage.”Footnote 62 Despite a very promising first ruling on November 20, 2020 accepting some “climate obligations” for attenuation and later confirmed in July 2021, the adaptation part of the petition was dismissed by the court. However, the adaptation claims and the “climate vulnerabilities” cases will probably multiply in France and the rest of Europe for years to come.
D. From “Climate Emergency to Climate Priority”: The Example of the Grande Synthe Case
The Grande Synthe final decision of July 1, 2021 is quite remarkable because it does not only consider that the municipality, by its exposure to climate risks and its vulnerabilities, is legitimate to act and therefore has an interest in acting, but it also positions itself as a pioneer on three main points.Footnote 63 First, it stresses that the texts of international law committing France to the climate plan (framework convention and Paris Agreement) must be considered. Second, the decision notes the normative nature of the programming documents on carbon targets and trajectories, carbon budgets, and the various periods to be observed. Finally, the decision settles on the non-respect of the reduction trajectories for the period 2015–2018, based on the binding nature of the documents determining intermediate periods. If the issue of “climate priority”—the subject of one of the main demands of the appeal—was not dealt with directly, the judges nevertheless recognize that there is an “urgent need to act.” On one hand, despite the pandemic and the cessation of activities during the year 2020, the GHG reduction trajectory will probably not be up to the quantities required for 2030 and to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050. On the other hand, given the current state of climate policies and legislation, carbon reduction budgets do not correspond coherently with the European objectives set for 2030. According to the courts, these two aspects highlight a delay observed by France and a certain difficulty to update, in terms of the efforts to be provided by 2030. Therefore, even indirectly, the judges recognize that there is a “climate emergency” and that it would be a priority to act quickly.Footnote 64
E. Using Classical Legal Concepts for “New Climate” Purpose: The Example of the “Ecological Prejudice” in the Affaire du siècle Case
The affaire du siècle is a case brought before the tribunal administratif de Paris (TA) in February 2019 claiming that the State is responsible for causing ecological damage on the atmosphere.Footnote 65 Previously, an online petition filed by the four NGOs that wished to bring the appeal had been signed by almost one million people. Consequently, the case garnered very large media coverage. The failure of the State is due to the ecological damage it would have committed by altering the atmosphere with an excess of emissions. The fault of the State and thus the damage produced to the atmosphere come from the fact the State did not take the necessary steps to avoid the excess of CO2 emissions. This excess would lead France on a trajectory far from the one marked in both the European Union commitments and the Paris Agreement. This argument—central in this case—pushes new boundaries on climate justice in general and even more specifically in Europe and France.
Both decisions, in l’affaire du siècle opened up a new avenue by recognizing ecological damage due to the “alteration produced in the atmosphere” due to the excess of cumulative GHG emissions.Footnote 66 This issue of ecological damage and prejudice, largely unexplored for the time being on the climate issue, will undoubtedly become a strong trend for future litigation.
As a reminder, four NGOs (the Oxfam France association, Greenpeace France, the Fondation pour la Nature et l’Homme and NAAT) had lodged a request before the administrative court in March 2019 asking for the State to be ordered to pay them the sum of one euro in compensation for the moral damage suffered, to order the State to pay them the symbolic sum of one euro for ecological damage. Further, they sought to order the Prime Minister and the competent ministers to put an end to the whole State failure to meet its obligations —general and specific— in the fight against climate change or to mitigate its effects and put an end to ecological damage. The four NGOs also requested to take measures to achieve France’s objectives in terms of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, developing renewable energies, and increasing energy efficiency, and to reach targets set by various laws, regulations, and decrees, as well as in relation to European Union law. They also demanded that the necessary measures be taken to adapt the national territory to the effects of climate change as well as those necessary to ensure the protection of the life and health of citizens against the risks associated with climate change.
The tribunal administratif de Paris ruled partially in favor of the applicants in both a first decision on February 3, 2021, and a second decision on October 14, 2021, reaffirming the first. In its decision on February 3, 2021, the court ruled on three points. It first ruled on the admissibility of the action for ecological damage. It then ruled on the existence of ecological damage and moral damage. Finally, the judges expressed their opinion on the failure and responsibility of the State as well as the “causal link” between the cited prejudices and the absence or insufficiency of State action.
The Tribunal has established the existence of an ecological damage derived from the deficiencies of the State.Footnote 67 As a result, the failings committed by the state because of its deficiency have been established as being the source of environmental damage characterized by the worsening of climate change. This damage would cause a change in the atmosphere and impair its ecological functions.Footnote 68
Regarding the establishment of the damage, the decision goes quite far, asserting that the damage is not only “established” but that it is also “aggravated” (§ 31). Relying on various works by the IPCC, those of the National Observatory on the effects of global warming, and those of CITEPA, the TA considered that the constant increase in the average global temperature of the Earth is responsible for a “modification of the atmosphere and its ecological functions” which has already accelerated the melting of continental ice and permafrost and the warming of the oceans, resulting in turn in rising sea levels combined with the increase, in frequency and severity, of extreme climatic phenomena, and damage to ecosystems, with serious and irreversible consequences on human activities. It also follows from these reports that global warming will reach 1.5 °C between 2030 and 2052 if anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions continue to increase at their current rates, and that it will persist for several centuries even if emissions decrease, due to the persistence of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. The report concluded that a warming of 2 °C rather than 1.5 °C would seriously increase these phenomena and their consequences.
For the judges, it also results from these studies that each additional half-degree of global warming very significantly reinforces the associated risks, for the most vulnerable ecosystems and populations, and that limiting this warming requires reducing, by 2030, greenhouse gas emissions by forty-five percent compared to 2010 and achieving carbon neutrality by 2050 at the latest. Finally, in France, the increase in average temperature, which rose 1.14 °C during the decade 2000–2009 compared to the period between 1960–1990, caused the acceleration of the loss of mass of the glaciers. In particular, since 2003, the worsening of coastal erosion, which affects a quarter of the French coasts, and the risk of submersion, poses serious threats to the biodiversity of glaciers and the coast, and leads to an increase in extreme climatic phenomena—risks that affect sixty-two percent of the population. On this point, the court concluded that “in view of all of these elements, the ecological damage invoked by the applicant associations must be regarded as established.”Footnote 69
The situation is different with reparations. This became an issue as the TA believes that elements are still missing to substantiate the impossibility of his compensation in kind. Reparations will therefore be more of a “symbolic” recognition than operational, which nonetheless constitutes significant progress for the law of climate responsibility.Footnote 70 The court considers, in fact, that compensation for ecological damage is carried out as a priority in kind and that it is only in the event of the impossibility or insufficiency of the compensation measures that the judge condemns the person responsible to pay damages and interests to the plaintiff, these being allocated to the reparation of the environment.Footnote 71 However, according to the TA, the associations in this case did not demonstrate that the state would be unable to provide compensation in kind. With regards to the amount of the sum requested in respect of his pecuniary compensation, the judges consider that the request for payment of a symbolic euro is unrelated to the importance of what the payment symbolises. It will be on this reasoning that the TA rejects this point of the application.Footnote 72
The last decision of the affaire du siècle in October 2021 confirms the solution of the first ruling but clarifies the question of the reparation.
The October 14 ruling establishes that the administration should repair the ecological prejudice caused to the atmosphere by compensating the excess of emissions emitted in the past period, from 2015–2018.Footnote 73 The judges considered that even though greenhouse emissions were reduced during the confinement period due to the Covid pandemic (all activities were down during that period of time), that alone was not satisfactory enough and the global amount of emissions in France has not met levels necessary to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050. Considering this fact, the court sentenced the State to “take all necessary actions” in order to reduce emissions from now until December 31, 2022, in order to attain the trajectory of emissions according to the Paris Agreement mandatory limit of 2°C.
Undoubtedly, the affaire du siècle last decision will mark the public climate disputes in France. However, this case has to be understood with the Grande Synthe case. They both are complementary and coherent with the present and dynamic evolution that French climate change litigation is experimenting.
Indeed, the Conseil d’Etat in the Grande Synthe affair, with the ruling of July 1, 2020, developed its reasoning that the State must pay respect to its “climate obligation.” The affaire du siècle decision follows this open path, considering that the State has a climate obligation both in relation to its past activities (for the period 2015–2018) and to the means of implementing the reduction of the emissions trajectory (for the period between now and December 31, 2022).
This article wanted to show how climate justice, which is currently taking place in the world and particularly in France, is changing the content of the State’s obligations in the climate change area. This article also shows that new “climate obligations” are emerging everywhere in the world. In France, these obligations and legal commitments are both. On the one hand, those that the Law and Climate National Planification (Low Carbon Strategy) must show. On the other hand, those that must also be imposed by the Environmental Assessment Impact studies. This article also shows that the issue of considering territorial, geographical, and physical vulnerabilities is important to properly assess climate risks in public policies. Finally, this article wanted to present how the new dynamics of climate change—both legislative, jurisprudential and public policy—are built from small steps, sometimes slow but lasting at the end. Climate Justice is assuredly a promising path to make the change happen in the climate change fight. French climate change justice litigation is a “to be continued” story with a very promising future before it.Footnote 74