Visiting Fellow publishes new book on private climate change lawsuits under English law

Posted on 4 Nov 2010 in

Giedre Kaminskaite-Salters has published a new book, ‘Constructing a Private Climate Change Lawsuit under English Law: a comparative perspective’. The book will be of particular interest to lawyers in multinational corporations and certain non-governmental organisations, but the book will also have relevance for a much broader spectrum of jurists, academics and policymakers.

The issue of tortious liability for harm caused by climate change has risen to some prominence in recent legal literature. However, except for a few U.S. cases, litigation in this area remains dormant in most jurisdictions.

Now, in anticipation of the likelihood – and desirability – of such litigation, this ground-breaking study examines the extent to which a claim brought by a private, public, or quasi-public claimant against a private defendant (such as a producer of fossil fuels or major emitter of greenhouse gases) alleging climate change–related damage, and based on one or more causes of action under the English law of torts, can be pursued in the English Courts.

Focusing on the circumstances and the prerequisites that must be met in order to construct a potentially successful case, Kaminskaite-Salters addresses the following questions:

  • On the basis of a high-level review of the relevant scientific literature, what impacts is climate change expected to have on the human and natural environment?
  • What goals would be served by climate change litigation?
  • Under what circumstances would the English Courts accept jurisdiction in relation to a climate change claim?
  • To what extent can existing tort law precedents – e.g., negligence, product liability, public nuisance – be used in climate change–related claims?
  • To what extent does the existence of a regulatory framework limit or extinguish the liability of the defendants if they can show full compliance with the provisions of the relevant regulations?
  • How would the current law of causation need to develop in order to overcome the difficulties inherent in ascribing certain forms of damage to climate change?

Kaminskaite-Salters shows that litigation can become a significant means of compensating climate change victims, encouraging regulatory change, and facilitating a socioeconomic transition away from the fossil fuel economy.