Conclusie
Facts and course of the proceedings
Introductory considerations
Kelderluikfactors) (2.20)
Substantiation of the order under human rights law (grounds for cassation 1-3)
Reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in the Netherlands by at least 25% in 2020 (grounds for cassation 4-8)
Effort Sharing Decision
Margin of appreciation
Fair balanceand proportionality
The constitutional lawfulness of the order (ground for cassation 9)
trias politicadoctrine and the jurisdiction of the civil courts (5.18)
Closing considerations
Conclusion
1.Facts and course of the proceedings
inter alia: flooding as a result of the rise in sea level; heat stress as a result of more intense and longer-lasting heat waves, increases in respiratory ailments associated with deteriorating air quality, droughts (with devastating forest fires), increased spread of infectious diseases, severe flooding as a result of torrential rainfall, and disruptions of the production of food and the supply of drinking water. Ecosystems, flora and fauna will be eroded and there will be losses in terms of biodiversity. As Urgenda has asserted and the State has not refuted, an inadequate climate policy will result in the second half of this century in hundreds of thousands of victims in Western Europe alone. [9]
inter aliathat the planet is warming as a result of the increase in the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere since the beginning of the industrial revolution, and that this is being caused by human activities, in particular by the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation. [15] In the AR5 report, the IPCC concluded that if the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is stabilised at around 450 ppm in the year 2100, the chance that the global temperature increase would remain under 2ºC is ‘likely’, meaning higher than 66%. In this respect, it must be kept in mind that 87% of the scenarios included in AR5 were based on assumptions regarding
negativeemissions; in other words: the possible removal of CO2 from the atmosphere.
inter aliathe page in the report of the third Working Group of experts for AR4 which contains the table (‘Box 13.7’) referred to in footnote 14 above, which states that if the Annex I countries wished to achieve the 450 ppm scenario, emissions of greenhouse gases would have to be 25%-40% lower than they were in 1990. [21]
Emissions Trading System. This system entails that companies in the ETS sector may only emit greenhouse gases in exchange for the surrender of emissions rights. These emissions rights may be bought, sold or retained. The total volume of greenhouse gases which ETS companies may emit in the period 2013-2020 decreases by 1.74% annually until, in 2020, a 21% reduction is achieved in comparison to the year 2005.
non-ETS sectors, the reduction target of 20% in 2020 means that the Netherlands will have to achieve an emissions reduction of 16% in comparison with emissions in 2005.
as a wholewill achieve an emissions reduction of 26%-27% in comparison to emissions in 1990. [33]
‘Schoon en zuinig’[Clean and economical], in the period 2007-2011 the Netherlands applied the premise of a reduction target of 30% in 2020 comparison to the emissions level in the reference year 1990. In a letter of 12 October 2009, the then-Minister of Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment (
Volkshuisvesting, Ruimtelijke Ordening en Milieubeheer -‘VROM’) informed the Dutch House of Representatives about the Netherlands’ negotiations objective within the context of the climate conference in Copenhagen in 2009 (COP-15). This letter stated
inter alia:
per capita of the populationare relatively high in comparison with other industrialised countries. [36] Of the total volume of Dutch greenhouse gas emissions, 85% consists of CO2. Dutch CO2 emissions have barely decreased since 1990 and have even risen in recent years. In the period 2008-2012, the Netherlands achieved a reduction of CO2 equivalent emissions of 6.4%. The reduction is attributable to greenhouse gases other than CO2. In that same period, the fifteen largest EU Member States achieved an emissions reduction of 11.8%, and the EU
as a wholeachieved a reduction of 19.2%.
ad litemof the 886 individuals listed in Appendix A to the initiating summons of 20 November 2013.
Kelderluik [56] ; see para. 4.54 of the District Court's judgment), as well as the State's discretionary power (see para. 4.55 of the District Court's judgment) and the targets and principles of international climate law and the law of the European Union, including the principle of a high level of protection, the precautionary principle and the prevention principle (see Article 191(2) TFEU; see paras. 4.56-4.62 of the District Court's judgment). The District Court focused its examination on the question of ‘whether according to objective standards the reduction measures taken by the State to prevent hazardous climate change for humanity and the environment are sufficient, also in view of the State’s discretionary power’ (para. 4.63 District Court’s Judgment).
2.Introductory considerations
Ground for the reduction order; layout of this chapter
as such. The District Court derived this duty of care from the open standard of Article 6:162(2) DCC. The Court of Appeal identified a treaty-law basis for this duty of care in the open standards of Articles 2 and 8 ECHR. To that extent, the reasoning underlying the two judgments differs. However, the specific, substantive interpretation of the duty of care – the factual substantiation for the reduction order based on insights drawn from climatology, the targets of international climate policy and the standards and principles of international law – is largely the same in the reasoning of both the District Court and Court of Appeal. [67]
et seq.), followed by a segue into the meaning of the causality requirement (para. 2.10
et seq.). We then discuss the judicial review of lawfulness under Dutch law and the general standard of care (para. 2.14
et seq.), devoting special attention to the doctrine of hazardous negligence (see para. 2.20
et seq.). The carry-over effect of international law on Dutch law (in the context of the judicial review of lawfulness) is then discussed in para. 2.26
et seq.
et seq.), attention will be devoted to ECtHR case law on positive obligations pursuant to Articles 2 and 8 ECHR (para. 2.41
et seq.). Afterwards, in para. 2.50
et seq., we will examine whether the Court of Appeal was entitled to base its reduction order on those articles. To that end, we discuss four main lines of ECtHR case law (para. 2.53
et seq.). In Chapter 3, we discuss the State's complaints regarding the human rights-law aspects of the order. The technical climatological aspects of the order will be discussed in Chapter 4.
disagreewith the objective of the claim also does not preclude a claim pursuant to Article 3:305a DCC. According to the Supreme Court, the decisive factor in a given case is whether it involves ‘similar interests’ within the meaning of Article 3:305a(1) DCC. That requirement is met if the interests in question lend themselves to consolidation such that the effective and efficient legal protection of the stakeholders can be advanced. [72]
ad litemfor the 886 individual claimants in the first instance. [74] The District Court held that Urgenda had standing to the extent it was acting on its own behalf, including to the extent it was representing the interests of persons outside of Dutch territory and future generations. [75] The Court of Appeal did not address the State's grounds regarding that issue, because according to the Court of Appeal, there is no dispute that Urgenda has standing to the extent it is acting on behalf of the current generation of Dutch residents against greenhouse gas emissions in Dutch territory. [76]
cf. also Article 3:296(1) DCC and Article 6:163 DCC). [81] Furthermore, many ‘unlawful act standards’ – including the safety standard applied by the District Court to determine whether there was an issue of hazardous negligence and the standard applied by the Court of Appeal relating to the government's ‘positive obligations’ in respect of situations which are hazardous to the living environment – are essentially based on a weighing of interests. The court never proceeds to such a weighing of interest if the claimant does not qualify as an ‘interested party’; in other words, a potential ‘victim’ of the violation of the law. [82]
Kalimijnenjudgment, which concerned the harm caused by the discharge of salt into a river, the Supreme Court accepted the possibility that each polluter would be held liable for a percentage of the harm that corresponded to its share in the pollution. [86] This 'linear' approach – to be distinguished from ‘joint and several’ liability for all harm, is also recognised in international environmental law. [87] The literature also refers to Article 47(1) of the Articles on Responsibility of States for Intentionally Wrongful Acts as established by the International Law Commission: ‘
Where several States are responsible for the same internationally wrongful act, the responsibility of each State may be invoked in relation to that act.’ [88]
Massachusetts v. Environmental Protection Agency. Very briefly put, that case concerned the question of whether the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was bound to regulate the emission of CO2 as an air pollutant. The US Supreme Court answered that question in the affirmative, holding
inter alia:
reverseglobal warming, it by no means follows that we lack jurisdiction to decide whether EPA has a duty to take steps to
slowor
reduceit. … A reduction in domestic emissions would slow the pace of global emissions increases, no matter what happens elsewhere.’ [91]
inter aliaArticle 6:162(2) DCC. That provision defines an 'unlawful act' as: (i) the violation of a right, (ii) an act or omission breaching a duty imposed by law and (iii) an act or omission breaching a rule of unwritten law pertaining to proper social conduct.
inter alia) Articles 2 and 8 ECHR [93] in the context of reviewing the unwritten law. The disputed judgment does not indicate with certainty whether the Court of Appeal was applying Articles 2 and 8 ECHR directly or indirectly, by way of Article 6:162(2) DCC. [94] Regardless, when specifically interpreting the duty of care derived from Articles 2 and 8 ECHR, the Court of Appeal relied not only on ECtHR case law, but also on treaties, principles of international climate law, and non-binding international climate policy instruments, such as the various COP decisions cited by the Court of Appeal. The question of the extent to which such international legal sources have a carry-over effect on national legal order (directly via Articles 2 and 8 ECHR, or indirectly via Article 6:162(2) DCC) is discussed in paras. 2.26
et seq. below.
Lindenbaum/Cohenjudgment from 1919. [97] Since that judgment, it has generally been accepted that engagement in an act or omission breaching a rule of unwritten law pertaining to proper social conduct also constitutes an unlawful act.
Kalimijnenjudgment referred to above, which regarded environmental pollution resulting from discharges of salt into a river, the Supreme Court held that when answering the question of whether the discharges of salt were contrary to the unwritten law of generally accepted standards and thus constituted an unlawful act against the users of the river downstream, account had to be taken 'on the one hand, of the nature and weight of the interests served by the discharges and, on the other, the interests served by the downstream use'. Building on this, the Supreme Court held 'that in weighing these opposing interests, special weight must be assigned to the interests of the downstream user to the extent that said person might, in principle, expect the river not to be excessively polluted by major discharges'. [99]
et seq.
Kelderluik(‘Cellar hatch’) judgment, the Supreme Court formulated points of view on the unlawfulness assessment in cases involving hazardous negligence. These points of view concern (i) the probability that potential victims would not exercise the required attention and due care, (ii) the chance that accidents would ensue as a result, (iii) the seriousness of the possible consequences, and (iv) the onerousness of precautionary measures. [104] These ‘
Kelderluikfactors’ were repeated in later case law, and supplemented with additional points of view, such as (v) the ‘normality’ of precautionary measures and (vi) the nature of the conduct. [105]
Kelderluikfactors focus on hazardous negligence situations. Although these do not constitute a framework for applying societal standards of due care in general, [106] these factors are still applied even in cases which do not involve hazardous negligence (analogously, supplemented with additional points of view, if necessary). [107] In this respect, it is relevant that the
Kelderluikfactors are in line with basic notions about handling risks. They are grounded in legal and economic principles and are also accepted, in similar phrasing, in other legal systems. One example is the 'Learned Hand' formula [108] in Anglo-American legal systems. [109] The
Principles of European Tort Lawand the
Oslo Principles on Global Climate Obligationscontain comparable assessment frameworks. [110] The
Kelderluikfactors show similarities to the viewpoints which the ECtHR maintains in its case law on positive obligations in environmentally hazardous situations (to be discussed below). [111]
Kelderluikfactors, supplemented by other viewpoints, such as the discretionary power to which the government is entitled. Some authors have criticised the application of the doctrine of hazardous negligence. In their opinion, this doctrine is intended for simple accident situations and is not suitable for assessing government policy in issues that are as complicated as climate change. [112] Other authors believe that the doctrine of hazardous negligence is the perfect framework for addressing the dangers of climate change. In this regard, they refer to the broad applicability of the
Kelderluikfactors as a general framework for dealing with risks. [113]
et seq. below). Nevertheless, the human rights approach of the Court of Appeal has been criticised (see section 2.51 et seq. below).
indirectimpact on the finding of unlawfulness. First of all, the interpretation of rules of national law is ‘treaty-based’ where possible, in accordance with the principle of international law that States are presumed to want to comply with their treaty obligations. Secondly, in implementing open standards, the national court will take international law into account as much as possible (irrespective of whether or not it has direct effect). This is the concept of reflex effect. It should be noted that it is not always possible to make a clear distinction between the two figures. [118]
Smoking Banjudgment discussed in para. 2.28.
Oslo Principles on Global Climate Obligationsargue the following:
effectivelyand
actively(see sections 2.37 and 2.38) and that such protection must be provided primarily at
nationallevel (see section 2.39). Finally, it is important that the ECHR requires a
minimum level of protectionand therefore does not oppose additional protection at national level (see section 2.40 below).
actio popularis’ to promote human rights in general is therefore, in principle, not possible under the ECHR. [133] However, this limitation is not absolute: as will be shown below, the ECHR also offers ‘general protection to society’ in certain situations (see section 2.59 below) and the ECtHR has stretched the victim requirement in appropriate cases in order to ensure effective legal protection (see sections 2.58 and 2.62 below).
inter aliadangerous industrial activities, regardless of whether these have been carried out by public or private operators, and in the context of natural disasters. According to established case law, Article 2 ECHR does not offer an absolute guarantee against every conceivable danger. [151]
Osmanobligation, [152] must not impose an 'impossible or disproportionate burden' on the national authorities. That is why the ECtHR attaches to this the condition that the authorities 'knew or ought to have known at the time of the existence of a real and immediate risk to the life of an identified individual or individuals from the criminal acts of a third party and that they failed to take measures within the scope of their powers which, judged reasonably, might have been expected to avoid that risk'. The ECtHR also accepted the
Osmanobligation in cases where the potential victims could not be identified in advance, for example in the case of random victims of violent persons. In this specific context, according to the ECtHR, Article 2 ECHR offers general protection to society. [153]
et cetera). Some cases concern larger-scale activities, involving more actors and more divergent interests (hospitality industry policy, traffic measures, stray dogs, waste policy). Even in the more small-scale cases, general/more general interests and policy themes sometimes play a role in the background (spatial planning, water management, environmental policy, disaster management).
generalinterests and, according to these authors, that is not what human rights are intended for. [173] Other authors consider the human rights approach of the Court of Appeal to be pre-eminently suitable for the assessment of this case. [174]
L.C.B./United Kingdomjudgment, a precursor to the aforementioned
Osmanjudgment, the ECtHR already considered that it comes down to whether the government has done what could be expected of it 'to prevent the applicant’s life from being avoidably put at risk'. [175] This preventive nature is inherent to the concept of positive obligations as such: they are intended to ensure that the government makes an effort to prevent human rights from being compromised by third parties or external factors. [176] It is important to note that this is not an obligation of result: the fact that a person dies does not necessarily imply a violation of the right to life. [177] In the words of Gerards, positive obligations are characterised by the fact that they ‘help to ensure the effective enjoyment’ of the human right in question. [178] This is without prejudice to the fact that the ECtHR often places high demands on the efforts to be made by the government and that such demands may involve the need to ensure a certain minimum level of protection (see paras. 2.63 et seq. below).
how farthis preventive protection goes. According to the ECtHR, the aforementioned
Osmanobligation to protect those at risk – which is also applied, by analogy, to environmental disasters and dangerous situations [179] – applies if the government is aware of a 'real and immediate risk' for persons. In the literature, questions have been raised with regard to the second element of this criterion: the requirement of immediacy. Referring to various ECtHR judgments, Sanderink argues that this requirement has hardly any added value, because it mainly concerns the
realityof the risk. [180] Gijselaar and De Jong conclude from the ECtHR case law that the point is whether the risk is
avoidable: if not, there is an 'immediate risk', even though it will only materialise in the longer term. [181] Emaus argues in a more general sense that the ECtHR case law is governed by a 'precautionary principle'. [182]
Taşkin and others/Turkeyjudgment offers support for this playing down of the requirement of immediacy. In that case, the complainants claimed a violation of Article 8 ECHR on account of environmental risks associated with the use of cyanide in the operation of a gold mine. The Turkish government defended itself by arguing that these risks were 'hypothetical' because they could only emerge in 20 to 50 years. The ECtHR dismissed this defence by ruling that the risks had been identified in several environmental reports. The risks were therefore sufficiently closely linked to the right to private and family life of those living in the vicinity of the gold mine, as protected by Article 8 ECHR. The ECtHR continued:
Tătar/Romaniajudgment, in which the ECtHR held that the continued operation of a gold mine was in violation of Article 8 ECHR, in connection with potential health risks for people living nearby, which risks had not been conclusively proven. The ECtHR referred in this context to the precautionary principle ('
le principe de précaution'), which has been accepted in international environmental law (see para. 2.74). [185] This also shows that in the context of positive obligations, the ECtHR does not require imminent damage and a causal link, nor require irrefutable proof of such: a
real riskbeing caused by the government’s actions is sufficient. [186]
Osmanobligation is not only intended to protect specific persons who are known in advance to be at risk, but also, in certain cases, to provide 'general protection to society' ('
une protection générale de la société'). [188] This is obvious, as the threat emanating from violent persons can affect random victims who cannot be individualised in advance. The nature of the danger calls for a wider scope of application in such cases.
Di Sarno and others/Italyand
Cordella and others/Italythat the environmental damage in question (a waste crisis and environmental pollution caused by a steel plant, respectively) affected the entire population of the region ('
l’ensemble de la population'). In both cases, the ECtHR ruled that Article 8 ECHR had been violated. [189] Another illustrative example is the
Stoicescu/Romaniajudgment, in which a violation was ruled to have been committed in connection with the fact that the complainant had been attacked by stray dogs. The Romanian authorities had long been aware of the danger posed by stray dogs - which had developed into 'a public health and safety issue’ - but had done nothing to curb it. The circumstance that the stray dogs obviously did not specifically target the complainant, and the authorities therefore could not foresee that and in what way she would become a victim of such an attack, did not prevent the ECtHR from assuming a violation of Article 8 ECHR. Van de Westelaken argues that the requirement that the potential victims must be identifiable, as laid down in the
Osmanjudgment, has thus been abandoned. [190]
principle of effective interpretation(see para. 2.37 above): in this category of ‘untargeted’ dangers and environmental damage, setting the requirement that potential victims must be identifiable would undermine the protection offered by Articles 2 and 8 ECHR.
principle of effective interpretation: precisely because citizens cannot know whether they are subject to secret surveillance, Article 34 ECHR cannot be applied in full. Otherwise, the protection offered by Article 8 ECHR would be rendered illusory.
Öneryildizjudgment, which involved a gas explosion at a Turkish rubbish tip. The Turkish authorities, who had been aware of the risk of explosion for many years but had done nothing to protect the inhabitants of a nearby slum, argued that the resettlement of those inhabitants was a large-scale and costly operation and that humanitarian considerations prevented an immediate evacuation of the slum. The ECtHR rejected those arguments and ruled that Article 2 ECHR had been violated. The ECtHR indicated exactly what measures the Turkish government should have taken and how it should have weighed the interests involved:
timingof precautionary measures is evident from the
Budayeva and others/Russiajudgment, concerning a mudslide caused by poor water management. The Russian government argued in its defence that the timing and severity of the mudslides could not be accurately predicted. The ECtHR ignored this because the government had not explained which measures it had taken to protect the inhabitants of the at-risk area. The ECtHR ruled that Article 2 ECHR had been violated and endorsed the complainants’ view that 'implementing safety measures could have, and should have, taken place earlier'. In his accompanying annotation, Janssen concluded that the ECtHR performs an in-depth assessment of the evidence submitted by governments, and that reliance on the margin of appreciation has no chance of success if the government has no explanation for its failure to act adequately. [195]
Fadeyeva/Russiajudgment on air pollution and health risks caused by a steel plant is a case in point. In para. 68, the ECtHR stated first and foremost:
Kyrtatos v. Greece, no. 41666/98, ECHR 2003-VI, par. 52). Thus, in order to raise an issue under Article 8, the interference must directly affect the applicant’s home, family or private life.'
Fadeyeva/Russiajudgment was repeated in the 2017
Jugheli and others/Georgiajudgment and the 2019
Cordella and others/Italyjudgment. Both of these judgments concerned environmental pollution (by a power plant and steel plant, respectively) and in both judgments it was concluded on the basis of a careful and in-depth assessment of the governments’ considerations that the environmental policy pursued did not meet the due diligence requirement ('
diligence voulue'). [198]
Dubetska and others/Ukrainejudgment, concerning environmental pollution from a coal mine. The ECtHR found that the government’s policy towards the coal mine was characterised by 'numerous delays and inconsistent enforcement'. In spite of the 'wide margin of appreciation' that the ECtHR afforded in principle to the government in this case, the ECtHR ruled that Article 8 ECHR had been violated because the coal mine violated national rules and the government had done nothing to protect people living nearby from the pollution. [200]
Fabris/Francejudgment supports this approach. [205] Incidentally, it cannot be inferred from this that the
Fabris/Francejudgment encourages an extensive substantive interpretation of the ECHR. The foregoing is also without prejudice to the possible existence of other reasons for restraint on the part of the court (e.g. on the basis of the national relationships between the state powers, to be discussed in Chapter 5 below). The concept of a margin of appreciation takes on a different meaning in that case, in which the focus is no longer on the relationship between the ECtHR and the national court. Application by the national court raises the question of what margin of discretion or appreciation the national court affords the authorities in its own country. It already follows from the text of the treaty that generally speaking, this margin is more limited with regard to the right protected in Article 2 ECHR than with regard to the rights protected in Article 8 ECHR. [206]
et seq. above. [208]
Demir and Baykara/Turkeyjudgment, the ECtHR described the common ground method as follows:
Climate Change and Human Rights’ formulates five human rights obligations in relation to climate change, including mitigation and adaptation obligations. [224] In this context, reference can also be made to a ‘
Statement on the human rights obligations related to climate change’ by the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and the Environment. With reference to the ‘
Framework principles on human rights and the environment’ [225] drawn up earlier in UN context, the Special Rapporteur argues that it follows from this that humans rights require States 'to establish, implement and enforce effective laws and policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions'. [226] Reference should also be made to the previously mentioned
Oslo Principles on Global Climate Obligations, drawn up by a group of experts in the field of international law, human rights and environmental law. It argues, including on the basis of human rights, that States with excessive emissions of greenhouse gases are obliged to reduce emissions 'within the shortest time feasible'. [227]
Urgendacase, is the
Legharijudgment rendered by the Lahore High Court in 2015. In summary, this case concerned the question of whether the Pakistani government was obliged to implement a 2012 policy framework, the ‘National Climate Policy and Framework’, which included mitigation and adaptation measures. The Pakistani court considered, with reference to various national and international sources, that 'the delay and lethargy of the State in implementing the Framework offend the fundamental rights of the citizens'. In an interim decision, that court established, among other things, a ‘Climate Change Commission’, to monitor the implementation of the climate policy. [229]
adaptation obligationon States – i.e. to address the consequences of climate change – and not a
mitigationobligation – i.e. to prevent dangerous climate change by reducing emissions. [231] In general, this point of view does not seem to be supported by the international sources discussed above. [232] Hey and Violi state in their 2018 preliminary advice for the Association of International Law that the climate cases that have been instituted throughout the world thus far relate to mitigation measures. [233] Spier rejects the view expressed by Arts and Scheltema. According to him, it is actually the view 'that excessive emissions are a human rights violation (...) that is rapidly gaining ground'. [234] Spier points out, moreover, that adaptation alone is far from enough to eliminate all the consequences of climate change. [235]
Kolyadenko/Russiajudgment, which concerned a flooded residential area because a large volume of water had to be released from a reservoir after heavy rains. According to the ECtHR, the Russian authorities should have prevented the flooding by keeping a nearby river clean 'with a view to mitigating, if not preventing, the risk and consequences of flooding in the event of the urgent evacuation of water from the reservoir'. [236] In the ECtHR’s view, adaptation is in order where mitigation is impossible or cannot be demanded of States, such as in the case of unavoidable natural disasters. This is clear, for example, from the
Özel et al.
/Turkeyjudgment concerning the collapse of buildings due to an earthquake, in which the ECtHR considered:
thatContracting States are obliged by virtue of human rights to seriously reduce greenhouse gas emissions from their territory: a far-reaching best-efforts obligation. The legal sources in question do not answer the questions of
within what time periodand
to what extentreduction is required. In order to answer that question, the District Court and Court of Appeal have sought to establish a connection with, among other things, the various COP decisions that have been rendered in UN context since the publication of the AR4 report. [238] The Court of Appeal’s reasoning based on this is contested in grounds for cassation 4 through 8. Those complaints are discussed in Chapter 4 of this opinion.
3.Substantiation of the order under human rights law (grounds for cassation 1-3)
Ground for cassation 1.1is of an introductory nature. The complaint entails that in its description and further application of the legal framework, the Court of Appeal based itself on an incorrect interpretation of the law. In particular, the Court of Appeal allegedly failed to appreciate that in order to assume a positive obligation under Article 2 and/or Article 8 ECHR, there must be a real and immediate risk of violation of the rights protected under Article 2 and/or Article 8 ECHR of 'specific or specifically identifiable persons or groups' that are located within the jurisdiction of the State. That complaint is fleshed out in
ground for cassation 2, which is directed against paras. 44-45.
in the Netherlands, or at least with regard to persons who are located within the jurisdiction of the State of the Netherlands (within the meaning of Article 1 ECHR). Considered in that light, in the opinion of the State this ruling is legally incorrect or insufficiently substantiated (
ground for cassation 2.1). [241]
consequencesof the emission of greenhouse gases in the Netherlands occur. If the Court of Appeal is of the opinion that the State is obliged on the basis of Articles 2 and 8 ECHR to take reduction measures regardless of the location on the planet where the consequences of the emission of greenhouse gases in its territory occur, in the opinion of the State that opinion is incorrect: on the basis of those articles, the State can only be obliged to take reduction measures that prevent or limit the consequences of climate change in respect of persons who are subject to the jurisdiction of the State as referred to in Article 1 ECHR (
ground for cassation 2.2).
generalright to protection of the environment. [242] According to the State, Article 8 requires a causal connection between the activity (here: the emission of greenhouse gases) and the specific negative impact on an individual's human rights caused by that activity. A negative impact on society as a whole is insufficient. This is why the Court of Appeal could not base the State's positive obligation on the
generalconsequences of climate change mentioned in para. 44 - at least not without further reasons. By extension, the State has argued that the Court of Appeal ought to have investigated 'the probability of said consequences (...) occurring in a demarcated area within the Netherlands designated for human habitation' (
ground for cassation 2.3).
ground for cassation 2.4).
immediate. In the opinion of the State, it must be plausible that the consequences named by the Court of Appeal in para. 44 'will also materialise in the short term'. This is not the case, according to the State, because for the time being, the 2ºC target being exceeded is not at issue. If the Court of Appeal has applied the precautionary principle, its decision is also incorrect, or at least incomprehensible without further reasons. According to the State, that principle exclusively applies to 'clearly identifiable risks to a certain living environment'. The Court of Appeal did not establish such risks for the Netherlands. In the opinion of the State, the fact that the consequences of climate change cannot be avoided in the long term if a reduction of at least 25% has not been realised by the end of 2020 does not entail the existence of 'consequences of climate change that will materialise in the short term' (briefly put, according to
ground for cassation 2.5).
ground for cassation 2.6).
for residents of the Netherlandsin order to presume a reduction obligation borne by the State, nor has it argued that such specific risks are absent. [243] The ground for cassation does not provide any references in the procedural documents on appeal to the State’s assertions addressing this issue. [244] This means that these complaints may remain moot, as a new defence may not be conducted in proceedings for cassation. [245] We will briefly discuss the complaints nevertheless.
natureof the danger involved; see section 2.59. With ‘untargeted’ risks, such as earthquakes or harm to the living environment, with a view to the principle of effective interpretation the requirements to be imposed on the specification of the interests involved are not as high, as discussed in section 2.37 above. In that sense, Article 2 ECHR offers 'general protection to society' in such cases. Positive obligations to protect society may also ensue from Article 8 ECHR (see section 2.60 above). Demonstrable damage or threat of damage is not required in assuming a violation of Articles 2 and 8 ECHR, nor required when pronouncing an order based on Article 3:296 DCC. The issue is whether there is a real risk of harm to the interests of individuals protected by Articles 2 and 8 ECHR (cf. section 2.57 above).
specificrisks for
individualpersons can be deemed a fact that is generally known. The court may indicate which threats are involved, as the Court of Appeal did at the third and fourth bullet points of para. 44. However, the State is asking the Court of Appeal to do the impossible by demanding a specification of the dangers caused by climate change to specific or specifically identifiable individuals or groups located within the jurisdiction of the State. Put differently: if the opinion as argued by the State were followed, Articles 2 and 8 ECHR would not offer any more protection against climate change than possibly obliging the State to take adaptation or other measures
after the factto combat the
consequencesof climate change. As explained, some authors do indeed defend that position. [247]
effectiveand
activeprotection of the rights safeguarded by Articles 2 and 8 ECHR (see section 2.37 et seq.). If possible, that protection must be realised through
preventive action(section 2.53 et seq.), and it extends to
society as a wholein specific cases. The position that human rights may oblige states to mitigate is also gaining support in the international context (section 2.79 et seq.). In light of the common ground method applied by the ECtHR itself, the latter is an important viewpoint that supports the reduction obligation derived by the Court of Appeal from Articles 2 and 8 ECHR.
wouldfall within the scope of those articles. The circumstance that Article 34 ECHR does not allow an
actio popularisdoes not detract from this. Article 34 ECHR merely governs access to the ECtHR, as held by the Court of Appeal in para. 35, which is not disputed in these proceedings for cassation.
the Netherlands. [249] Ground for cassation 2.2 fails for this reason.
in itselfcertainly
isin line with the case law of the ECtHR regarding positive obligations based on Articles 2 and 8, respectively, of the ECHR. It was already demonstrated above that within the context of dangerous activities and harm to the environment, the ECtHR intensively assesses the policy considerations as weighed by the national authorities. More specifically, it was shown that their margin of appreciation does not relieve states of their obligation to 'act in good time, in an appropriate and, above all, consistent manner' (see section 2.64 above). The complaints are based on an incorrect interpretation of the law in so far as they entail that the margin of appreciation doctrine impedes an intensive or other assessment by the court of the time and speed of the reduction measures. [253]
similar interestswithin the meaning of Article 3:305a(1) DCC. The State has not disputed Urgenda’s standing to bring a class action to protect the living environment. The purport of the complaints is that the Court of Appeal should have held that Urgenda has no standing in so far as its claim is based on Articles 2 and 8 ECHR. [254] To that end, the State has argued that the ECHR 'only guarantees individual rights' and does not protect 'society as a whole'. The similarity requirement from Article 3:305a DCC therefore entails, in the opinion of the State, that the Court of Appeal should have determined 'which interests protected by Article 2 and/or Article 8 ECHR are impacted in what way and in respect of which individuals or groups'.
at its own initiativewhether the interests being served by Urgenda with reliance on Articles 2 and 8 ECHR are 'similar' within the meaning of Article 3:305a DCC (
ground for cassation 3.5).
Stoicescu/Romaniacase (about stray dogs [260] ) was not part of a 'specific group' and had not yet suffered damage at the time the government was obliged to take measures to protect her from that danger. We also refer to the judgment in the
Campeanu/Romaniacase. [261]
Reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in the Netherlands by at least 25% in 2020 (grounds for cassation 4-8)
CP decisions: 'Decisions adopted by the Conference of the Parties'; and
CMP decisions: 'Decisions adopted by the Conference of the Parties serving as the meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol'.
Kyoto Protocol. [275] In it, various, but not all, [276] Annex I countries mutually agreed on specific reduction levels for the period 2008-2012 (see section 1.2(xvi)).
Bali Action Planwas created, containing agreements on mitigation, adaptation, technological collaboration and financial support (see section 1.2(xvii)). [279] The preamble to the Bali Action Plan includes the following references to the IPCC's AR4 Report, discussed below at 4.39:
Recognizingthat deep cuts in global emissions will be required to achieve the ultimate objective of the Convention and emphasizing the urgency1 to address climate change as indicated in the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,'
Box 13.7as referred to below, stating a reduction target for the Annex I countries of 25-40% in 2020 as compared to 1990.
Cancun Agreements(see section 1.2(xviii)-(xix)). [281] In their '
Cancun Pledges', the parties laid down their specific reduction targets, with the EU pledging to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases by 20% as compared to 1990 by the end of 2020. The EU explicitly offered to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases by 30% if the other developed countries, among others, committed to a similar reduction. [282]
Also recognizingthat the contribution of Working Group III to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
Climate Change 2007: Mitigation of Climate Change, indicates that achieving the lowest levels assessed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to date and its corresponding potential damage limitation would require Annex I Parties as a group to reduce emissions in a range of 25–40 per cent below 1990 levels by 2020, through means that may be available to these Parties to reach their emission reduction targets,'
Aiming to ensurethat aggregate emissions of greenhouse gases by Parties included in Annex I are reduced by at least 25–40 per cent below 1990 levels by 2020, noting in this regard the relevance of the review referred to in chapter V of decision 1/CP.16 to be concluded by 2015,'.
Doha Amendment(see section 1.2(xx)). [286] This amendment amended Annex B of the Kyoto Protocol, but never went into force. [287] Where the first version of this Annex concerned the 'first commitment period' 2008-2013, in the amendment the emission reduction levels were determined for the 'second commitment period' 2013-2020. [288] For the EU, this amendment entailed EU Member States committing to a 20% reduction in 2020 as compared to 1990.
Decidesthat each Party included in Annex I will revisit its quantified emission limitation and reduction commitment for the second commitment period at the latest by 2014. In order to increase the ambition of its commitment, such Party may decrease the percentage inscribed in the third column of Annex B of its quantified emission limitation and reduction commitment, in line with an aggregate reduction of greenhouse gas emissions not controlled by the Montreal Protocol by Parties included in Annex I of at least 25 to 40 per cent below 1990 levels by 2020;’.
Emphasizingwith serious concern the urgent need to address the significant gap between the aggregate effect of Parties’ mitigation pledges in terms of global annual emissions of greenhouse gases by 2020 and aggregate emission pathways consistent with holding the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2 °C above pre-industrial levels and pursuing efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels,
Representative Concentration Pathwayor RCP - to certain concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere with which the realisation of the 2ºC target is 'likely', meaning a chance of more than 66%. This is the 'RCP 2.6' scenario, as reported in the above Table 3.1 with a greenhouse gas concentration of 450 (430-480) ppm in 2100. RCP 2.6 and other RCPs are shown in the figure below, Figure 3.2 from the AR5 Synthesis Report (p. 82):
high confidence). The emission scenarios collected for this assessment represent full radiative forcing including GHGs, tropospheric ozone, aerosols and albedo change. Baseline scenarios (scenarios without explicit additional efforts to constrain emissions) exceed 450 parts per million (ppm) CO2eq by 2030 and reach CO2eq concentration levels between 750 and more than 1300 ppm CO2eq by 2100. This is similar to the range in atmospheric concentration levels between the RCP 6.0 and RCP 8.5 pathways in 2100. For comparison, the CO2eq concentration in 2011 is estimated to be 430 ppm (uncertainty range 340 – 520 ppm).'
Greenhouse gasesCO2 (carbon dioxide) is the most important greenhouse gas. Other greenhouse gases, such as methane, laughing gas, and fluorinated gases, may have a larger greenhouse effect - expressed as Global Warming Potential or GWP - albeit for a shorter period than CO2. In that sense, the Court of Appeal's opinion at 3.3 is apparently intended to mean that other greenhouse gases have a lower global warming potential than CO2 and degrade at another speed. This opinion is not disputed in cassation.
The greenhouse effect and climate changeThere is a direct, linear connection between greenhouse gas emissions caused by humans, which are partly caused by the burning of fossil fuels, and the warming of the planet. Once emitted, CO2 remains in the atmosphere for hundreds of years, if not longer.
The 2ºC targetClimate scientists and the global community concur that global warming must be kept amply below 2ºC, while a 'safe' temperature increase should not be more than 1.5ºC, all as compared to the pre-industrial level. Global warming of more than 2ºC in comparison to the pre-industrial era would cause, for example: flooding as a result of sea level rise; heat stress as a result of more intense and longer-lasting heat waves, increases in respiratory ailments associated with deteriorating air quality, droughts (with devastating forest fires), increased spread of infectious diseases, severe flooding as a result of torrential rainfall, and disruptions in the production of food and the supply of drinking water. Ecosystems, flora and fauna will be eroded and there will be losses in terms of biodiversity. An inadequate climate policy will result in the second half of this century to hundreds of thousands of victims in Western Europe alone. [341]
Realising the 2ºC objectiveGlobal greenhouse gas emissions are still increasing. The emission of greenhouse gases remains high in the Netherlands, as well. Chances of reaching the 1.5ºC target are now very slim. In any event, limiting global warming to less than 2ºC will take enormous effort.
The carbon budgetIn the realm of climate science, as well as in the global community, long ago a consensus was reached entailing that the average temperature of the planet may not increase by more than 2ºC in comparison to the average temperature during the pre-industrial era. If the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere has not risen above 450 ppm by the year 2100, there is a reasonable chance that this objective will be realised. Limiting global warming to no more than 1.5ºC - which is the objective of the Paris Agreement - will require a significant reduction in the global concentration of greenhouse gases, to less than 430 ppm. The current concentration in 2018 was about 401 ppm. This means that the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere may increase only to a very limited degree. The longer it takes to realise the necessary reduction in emissions, the larger the total quantity of greenhouse gas emissions, and the earlier the carbon budget will be exhausted.
The ultimate goal for 2100 and the reduction targets for 2050 and 2030The ultimate goal is clear and not in dispute. Global greenhouse gas emissions must be brought to halt by 2100. The parties also have no quarrel as to the necessary interim reduction of 80-95% in 2050 as compared to 1990, and Urgenda endorses the government's proposed reduction target of 49% in 2030 as compared to 1990.
positive emissionrefers to the emission of greenhouse gases due to human activity.
Negative emissionrefers to greenhouse gases being removed from the atmosphere by means of suitable technology. [345] This is sometimes referred to as Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) through means of Negative Emission Technologies (NET). [346] One example of this is BECCS: the production of energy through the combustion of biomass in which greenhouse gases are stored, known as bio-energy (BE), followed by the capture and storage of the greenhouse gases released during the combustion (carbon capture and storage: CCS). [347] For the record, CCS can also be used with processes in the energy or other sectors in which oil, coal or gas is combusted, but this does not result in negative greenhouse gas emissions.
top imageof the figure in section 4.59 shows what happens if emissions are higher for the time being, and therefore if emissions are reduced at a slower rate. There are two main effects. Firstly, the remaining carbon budget is exhausted faster. As a result, the tipping point at which no emissions – positive emissions – are permitted is reached earlier. This means that intervention in the near and further future will have to be more far-reaching in order to still reach zero emissions quickly, from a relatively high level of emissions. This will probably be more difficult for society than a more gradual reduction of emissions. [349] Secondly, more negative emissions will be needed in the future. This means that the technologies necessary for this will be relied on more heavily. [350]
bottom partof the figure in section 4.59 shows what happens if emissions are lower earlier, and therefore if emissions are reduced at a faster rate. In that event, the remaining carbon budget is exhausted more slowly. As a result, the tipping point at which no emissions - positive emissions - are permitted is reached later. There is more time to achieve the 2ºC target. Lower negative emissions will be needed, and the capture and storage of greenhouse gases can commence later. This means that there will be more time before reliance on the technologies necessary for the capture and storage of greenhouse gases is needed.
reductie routes] in the figure shown below). The later emission reductions commence, the faster the carbon budget is exhausted. In order to prevent this, later reductions would need to be accelerated in order to make up for the 'backlog' incurred.
vast jaarlijks reductiepercentage], the red (lower) part reflects the quantity of greenhouse gas emissions and thus the part of the carbon budget consumed. Following the pathway entitled 'Fixed annual reduction quantity' [
vaste jaarlijkse reductiehoeveelheid], this consumption is collectively comprised of the red section and the blue (middle) section. Following the pathway that Urgenda calls 'Postponed reduction' [
uitgestelde reductie], [351] the consumption is collectively comprised of the red section, the blue section and the (top) grey section.
Delaying mitigation efforts beyond those in place today through 2030 is estimated to substantially increase the difficulty of transition to low-longer-term emissions levels and narrow the range of options consistent with maintaining temperature change below 2ºC relative to pre-industrial levels.' [356]
later action scenario’s [361] may not be feasible in practise and, as a result, temperature targets could be missed' and that '
later-action scenario’s pose greater risks of climate impacts'. [362]
Planbureau voor de leefomgeving -PBL) [363] describes the limited carbon budget and the need for a stringent climate policy throughout the world: a policy that must go much further than the existing policy of the countries involved. According to the PBL, the Netherlands’ policy must be tightened in the short term to bring it in line with the Paris Agreement (with regard to the Paris targets of 2°C and 1.5°C). [364]
Nature(2017), to which Urgenda referred. [365]
thatclaimed reduction.
grounds for cassation 4 through 8, each of which consists of several subgrounds, the State directs complaints against (parts of) paras. 12, 15, 48, 49 and 62 (ground for cassation 4), paras. 12 and 50 through 53 (ground for cassation 5), para. 47 (ground for cassation 6), paras. 26, 60 and 62 (ground for cassation 7) and paras. 47 and 53 through 76 (ground for cassation 8).
legallybound to a reduction target of 25% by 2020. This reduction target is not a standard agreed upon by the State or an internationally accepted standard. However, the State is bound by a 20% reduction by 2020 at international and European level; this percentage will be amply met at EU level (i.e. 26% to 27%). The Court of Appeal should have taken this into account.
factualsense for the achievement of the 2ºC target. This necessity does not follow from the IPCC reports. The ordered additional reduction by the Netherlands in 2020 has no measurable effect on the global temperature increase.
individualcountry such as the Netherlands. The Netherlands alone cannot solve the global climate problem.
discretionafforded to the State.
need for a reductionof at least 25% by 2020 as such. This concerns the following points (paras. 4.89 et seq.).
grounds for cassation 4.8, 5.4 and 5.6.
grounds for cassation 4.1 and 5.4. [378]
grounds for cassation 4.2, 4.5, 4.6, 4.7, 5.2 and 5.4.
grounds for cassation 5.5, 6.1, 6.2 and 6.3are about.
grounds for cassation 5.5 and 5.6are about.
individual responsibility of the Netherlands. This concerns the following points (paras. 4.178 et seq.).
grounds for cassation 4.3 and 7.1 through 7.5are about.
ground for cassation 7.7is about.
effects of the additional Dutch emission reductionsif the reduction order is implemented (section 4.199). This is where, to a certain extent, the themes of ‘necessity’ and ‘individual responsibility’ meet.
grounds for cassation 4.4 and 7.6). Secondly, the State argues that it is not necessary for the Netherlands to reduce emissions by at least 25% by 2020, because the EU as a whole will already be doing so (
ground for cassation 5.6). Thirdly, the question is whether the positive effect of the reduction order on Dutch emissions could be offset by opposite effects abroad (
grounds for cassation 8.5.1 and 8.5.2).
complaints about the application of the ECHRby the Court of Appeal, which build on in part from grounds for cassation 1 and 2 (paras. 4.213 et seq.). In it, the State argues that the ECHR does not provide a basis for the reduction order because, supposedly, it would not be effective (
ground for cassation 8.2.1), while the Court of Appeal attributed too little significance to other measures, such as adaptation measures (
grounds for cassation 8.2.2-8.2.4). Furthermore, according to the State, the Court of Appeal took too little account of the margin of appreciation (
ground for cassation 8.3) and failed to subject the reduction order to a fair balance review and proportionality review (
ground for cassation 8.4).
remaining complaintsof grounds for cassation 4 through 8 are discussed (paras. 4.236 et seq.). They cover various topics: the 450 ppm scenario (
ground for cassation 5.2 (para. 1); the precautionary principle (
ground for cassation 8.6); relativity (
grounds for cassation 8.7.1-8.7.2); the remaining time until the end of 2020 (
ground for cassation 8.8); the 1.5°C target (
ground for cassation 8.10); and also the complaints in the various grounds for cassation that merely build on from others.
grounds for cassation 4.8, 5.4 and 5.6are directed first and foremost against the considerations cited above, in particular paras. 12, 48, 51 and 52. They relate to the legal nature of the reduction targets for 2020.
Ground for cassation 5.4 (paras. 1 and 3 through 7)repeats these complaints and also projects them on the reference to the COP decisions.
agreementthat is legally binding on the State.
standardthat is legally binding on the State (different from an agreement) in respect of the concentration level of 450 ppm in AR4 and AR5, the reduction target of 25%-40% in 2020 from AR4 and the decisions of the COPs. The State wonders whether the Court of Appeal has interpreted all this as ‘necessary in a normative sense’, [379] i.e. as international obligations. [380] The State has already indicated that it has doubts as to whether the Court of Appeal assumed this to be the case, but it has formulated a number of complaints against this to be sure. [381]
Confidence has increased that a 1 to 2 oC increase in global mean temperature above 1990 levels (about 1.5 to 2.5 oC above pre-industrial) poses significant risks to many unique and threatened systems including many biodiversity hotspots.'. The District Court presented this by formulating that the IPCC 'established that a global temperature rise of 2°C above the pre-industrial level (up to the year 1850) creates the risk of dangerous, irreversible change of climate'. [384]
Similarly, limiting temperature increases to 2°C above pre-industrial levels can only be reached at the lowest end of the concentration interval found in the scenarios of category I (i.e. about 450 ppmv CO2-eq using ‘best estimate’ assumptions).' The District Court ‘translates’ this in such a way that, according to the report, 'a temperature rise of 2°C maximum can only be achieved when the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is stabilised at about 450 ppm'. [385]
concentration levelthat is ‘permissible’ and 'may not’ be exceeded is therefore only intended as a short presentation of the IPCC reports that is comprehensible to the reader of the judgment (with or without scientific training). It cannot be inferred from this that the Court of Appeal has interpreted the concentration level of 450 ppm from AR4 and AR5 (or the corresponding 2ºC target) as a specific standard formulated by the IPCC that is legally binding on States.
the reduction targetof 25%-40% in 2020 from AR4 as a legally binding standard. This can also be answered in the negative. The District Court [387] reproduced Box 13.7 from AR4 and describes its content as follows:
the decisions of the COPsas a legally binding standard. The Court of Appeal describes the COP as the supreme decision-making body of the UNFCCC, adding that 'the COP decisions are not always legally binding'. [388] This is in line with what has already been said about the role of the COP and of COP decisions (see section 4.9 above).
this 25%-40% standard' in para. 51 only expresses this concerns a legally non-binding statement about a ‘fair’ distribution of the reduction effort.
ground for cassation 4.8 (para. 3)that the Court of Appeal started from an incomprehensible interpretation of the State’s ground for appeal 2 cannot succeed. Contrary to what this complaint presupposes, the District Court and Court of Appeal did not assume that the IPCC '
establishesnorms, emission ceilings and emission reduction targets'.
Reflex effect?The question then arises as to whether the Court of Appeal could have attributed significance to the reduction target of 25%-40% by 2020 in specifying the State’s duty of care.
(grounds for cassation 4.8 (section 2) and 5.4 (section 5.4)).
Exclusive effect of EU reduction targets?Even if the ECHR allows for the 25-40% reduction target in 2020 to be taken into account, EU law might in theory force a different conclusion. This could be the case if EU law were to attribute exclusive effect to the reduction target of the ETS Directive and the Effort Sharing Decision. Exclusive effect in this context means that legally binding reduction agreements entered into by the State in an EU context explicitly or implicitly entail that the State cannot be obliged to comply with a certain, possibly more far-reaching reduction target on other legal grounds – such as the ECHR or Article 6:162 DCC.
Request for preliminary ruling?The last question to be discussed in this context is whether the Court of Appeal should have referred a question on EU law to the Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ) for a preliminary ruling.
ground for cassation 5.6 (para. 6). This complaint is directed against the Court of Appeal’s finding in para. 52 that the State does not observe its duty of care by complying with the 20% reduction by 2020 agreed at EU level. According to the State, this finding implies the opinion that the EU is acting unlawfully as well and/or that the ETS Directive and the Effort Sharing decision are unlawful. According to the complaint in ground for cassation 5.6, the Court of Appeal should not have rendered an opinion on this matter without requesting the Court of Justice of the European Union for a preliminary ruling on, for instance, the validity or legality of the EU measures in question. [397]
Francovichliability) have not been complied with and because Directive 2004/354/EC on environmental liability does not apply to cases in which the causes of the damage are diffuse, such as the present case. [401] This type of questions also includes the possible exclusive effect of the ETS system, which has been presented to and assessed by the Court of Appeal.
ground for cassation 5.6.
grounds for cassation 4.8, 5.4 and 5.6 (para. 6) fail. These complaints are essentially that the Court of Appeal has interpreted the 25%-40% reduction target for 2020 from AR4 and the decisions of the COPs as a legally binding agreement or standard; that this reduction target has no reflex effect; that the Court of Appeal does not take into account the binding reduction targets set at international and European level; and that the Court of Appeal should have requested the ECJ for a preliminary ruling.
ground for cassation 4.1the Court of Appeal’s findings (in paras. 12 and 48) that in AR4 the IPCC concluded, following an analysis of the various reduction scenarios (in Box 13.7), that in order to reach this concentration level, the total greenhouse gas emissions in 2020 of Annex I countries, of which the Netherlands is one, must be 25-40% lower than 1990 levels. The Court of Appeal moreover, in para. 51 of its judgment, attributes too much significance to the COP decisions, according to
ground for cassation 5.4 (paras. 1, 2 and 6).
A target of 10%-40% or of 25%-40%?As mentioned before (paragraphs 4.42-4.43), the report of Working Group III of AR4 mentions different reduction targets for Annex I countries. Chapter 13 contains Box 13.7 that mentions the reduction target of 25%-40% in 2020. The Technical Summary mentions a reduction target of 10% to 40% by 2020. The latter is also mentioned in the Executive Summary. [410]
A reasoned proposal. The next item to be discussed concerns the nature of the reduction target for the Annex I countries included in Box 13.7. The State rightly points out that this is not about a conclusion substantiated by the natural sciences that this reduction target is necessary to achieve the 2ºC target, but about a proposal for a distribution of the global reduction efforts. [413]
the sciences are unable to indicate an unambiguous relationship between the required emission reductions of the industrialised countries as a group by 2020 and the reduction of global warming to 2ºC by the end of this century'. [415]
ground for cassation 4.1, the Court of Appeal has recognised that Box 13.7 is placed in Chapter 13 of the sub-report of AR4 drawn up by the IPCC Working Group III. [425] This does not, of course, prevent reference from being made to AR4 of the IPCC for short. For the sake of brevity, the District Court usually refers in its judgment to ‘the IPCC’ and ‘the report’ in which it quotes AR4 or parts thereof, but in its citation of the sources and in para. 2.16 it appears to recognise that AR4 consists of different parts. The same applies to the Court of Appeal, which started from these findings of the District Court. [426]
25%-40% standard’ and considers that the IPCC ‘
concludes’ that in order to reach the concentration level of 450 ppm emissions from Annex I countries (which includes the Netherlands) will have to 25% to 40% lower in 2020 than in 1990. [427] This may be called a ‘standard’, [428] because this target is based on a set of reasoned normative judgments about a division issue. This may be called a ‘conclusion’, because it is a summary of the currently available scientific research into the possible distribution of the reduction efforts. Therefore, it cannot be said that the Court of Appeal has failed to recognise the nature of the reduction target for the Annex I countries included in Box 13.7.
The meaning of the target of 25%-40%. Now that the origin of the reduction target in Box 13.7 has been discussed, it can be seen why the Court of Appeal has attributed significance to it. The main focus of this part of the State's grounds for cassation is on the question of whether the Court of Appeal has attributed
toomuch significance to this target. Grounds for cassation 4.1 and 5.4 (paragraphs 1, 2 and 6) contain several complaints about this.
grounds for cassation 4.1 and 5.4 (paras. 1, 2 and 6)fail.
We conclude that these technologies [Court of Appeal: negative emission technologies, abbreviated as NET’s] offer only limited realistic potential to remove carbon from the atmosphere and not at the scale envisaged in some climate scenarios (…)' (p. 1)' Figure 1 shows not only the dramatic reductions required, but also that there remains the challenge of reducing sources that are particularly difficult to avoid (these include air and marine transport, and continued emissions from agriculture). Many scenarios to achieve Paris Agreement targets have thus had to hypothesise that there will be future technologies which are capable of removing CO2 from the atmosphere.' (p. 5)
the inclusion of CDR [Court of Appeal: removal of CO2 from the atmosphere] in scenarios is merely a projection of what would happen if such technologies existed. It does not imply that such technologies would either be available, or would work at the levels assumed in the scenario calculations. As such, it is easy to misinterpret these scenarios as including some judgment on the likelihood of such technologies being available in the future.'(p. 5)
Ground for cassation 4.6contests that the Court of Appeal could dismiss the argument that, according to AR5, there are several emission reductions pathways along which the 2ºC target can be achieved. Another complaint is that AR4 is outdated because AR5 is based on more recent insights (
ground for cassation 4.5) and, unlike AR4, does not mention any reduction percentages (
ground for cassation 4.7).
Ground for cassation 5.2 (paragraph 2)also relates the complaints of grounds for cassation 4.5-4.7 to para. 50. Moreover, according to the State, the Court of Appeal disregards the fact that the distinction between Annex I countries and other countries is outdated (
grounds for cassation 4.2 and 5.4 (para. 2)).
Several reduction pathways in AR5 (RCP 2.6)?Because the reduction order imposed on the State is based on the need, as argued by the Court of Appeal on the basis of the facts, to reduce emissions by at least 25% by 2020,
ground for cassation 4.6in particular goes right to the heart of the matter. If, after all, according to AR5 there are still several reduction pathways towards the 2ºC target and these reduction pathways are feasible, then there may be a need to think differently about the need to achieve a certain reduction as early as 2020.
high confidence) (…). CDR is also prevalent in many scenarios without overshoot to compensate for residual emissions from sectors where mitigation is more expensive.'
that these technologies offer only limited realistic potential to remove carbon from the atmosphere and not at the scale envisaged in some climate scenarios' and that '
the inclusion of CDR […] in scenarios is merely a projection of what would happen if such technologies existed.'
CDR is also prevalent in many scenarios without overshoot to compensate for residual emissions from sectors where mitigation is more expensive.'
a large proportion of the new scenarios include Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) technologies.' [442]
ground for cassation 4.6thus fail.
Has the reduction target referred to in AR4 been otherwise overtaken by AR5?The State also argues that the 25%-40% reduction target for 2020 mentioned in AR4 has been overtaken by AR5 because AR5 is based on the most recent scientific insights at the time (see
ground for cassation 4.5).
ground for cassation 4.7. The State again invokes its argument that 25%-40% reduction by 2020 is not necessary as an intermediate step in order to achieve the 2ºC target, because there are multiple reduction pathways and relevant here are the targets for 2030 and 2050. But this argument was rejected by the Court of Appeal and the complaints against this judgment are unsuccessful (as was shown in the discussion of ground for cassation 4.6), so that ground for cassation 4.7 does not apply either.
Is the distinction between Annex I countries and other countries outdated?According to the State, the reduction target mentioned in AR4 is also outdated because the distinction between Annex I countries and other countries is outdated. The 25%-40% reduction target by 2020 from AR4 concerned the Annex I countries. The State argues that the distinction between Annex I countries and other countries is outdated or has faded. Put succinctly, this is because there are now more countries that account for a large proportion of greenhouse gas emissions (such as China, India, Brazil and Indonesia). Nowadays, all countries must assume their responsibility in order to achieve emission reductions. The distinction is therefore no longer reflected in the Paris Agreement and AR5. The State accuses the Court of Appeal of not having responded to this argument and to have wrongly based its judgment on this distinction (
ground for cassation 4.2).
Ground for cassation 5.4 (para. 2)adds that even COPs from after AR5 no longer refer to the reduction target of 25%-40% by 2020.
ground for cassation 4.2(bottom p. 17 of the initiating document) directed against the Court of Appeal’s finding (in para. 15) that, according to the Paris Agreement, the distinction between Annex I countries and other countries will disappear in 2020. It should be noted that this is a finding that does not support the Court of Appeal’s opinion on the emission reduction to be expected from the Netherlands in 2020, so that a complaint against it could under no circumstances lead to the setting aside of the Court of Appeal’s judgment.
grounds for cassation 4.2, 4.5, 4.6, 4.7 and 5.4(2)do not hold. That is why the complaint in
ground for cassation 5.2 (para. 2)fails too. In conclusion, the Court of Appeal could find that this reduction target for 2020 is not outdated.
grounds for cassation 5.5 (para. 6) and 6.3 (para. 2). Here, the State argues that in paras. 47 and 52 the Court of Appeal has not taken sufficient account of the acceleration of the reduction efforts after 2020. Due to the acceleration in the period after 2020, a smaller part of the carbon budget is used, which, at least in part, 'compensates’ for the postponement and therefore greater consumption of the carbon budget in the period before 2020.
the end of ground for cassation 6, which is based on a different interpretation of the Court of Appeal’s judgment, cannot succeed.
grounds for cassation 6.1 and 6.2, the Court of Appeal did not rule in para. 47 that a linear reduction effort that would lead to a reduction of 28% by 2020 is necessary.
grounds for cassation 6.1 and 6.3 (sections 1 and 3). [454]
et seq.) and that, in view of the State’s intention to accelerate the reductions, a 25% reduction in emissions by 2020 would not be necessary anyway (section 4.163
et seq.). For these reasons,
grounds for cassation 6.1 and 6.3 (sections 1 and 3)must be rejected.
Grounds for cassation 5.5 (para. 6), 6, 6.1, 6.2 and 6.3of the State do not hold.
grounds for cassation 5.5 and 5.6. This brings us to the discussion of the last of the five subthemes about the need for a reduction of at least 25% by 2020.
ground for cassation 5.5 (sections 1 through 5)do not alter this.
ground for cassation 5.6 (section 1). [458] The State argued on appeal that ‘there is no absolute need for Annex I countries, including the Netherlands, to reduce emissions by 25%-40% in 2020 compared to 1990 to keep the 2ºC target within reach. It does require far-reaching emission reduction measures, but there are certainly opportunities for that.' [459] In this context, the State argued ‘that there are multiple reduction pathways to ensure that global warming is limited to 2º Celsius or less'. [460]
ground for cassation 5.6 (section 1), para. 52 cannot be said to be self-contradictory. The Court of Appeal is simply comparing the State’s initial target with its current target (at EU level).
ground for cassation 5.6 (sections 2 and 5), the State also complains that the finding that in 2009 the EU considered a 30% reduction by 2020 to be necessary. The Court of Appeal refers in this respect to para. 17 of its judgment, in which it held, amongst other things:
an overall reduction of more than 20%, in particular in view of the European Council’s objective of a 30% reduction[Court: of EU emissions of greenhouse gases relative to 1990]
by 2020, which is considered scientifically necessary to avoid dangerous climate change(…)'. This objective is detailed in the Directive, in which the reduction commitment of 30% by 2020 is linked to the condition – put briefly – that other countries join in.'
30% reduction[...]
considered scientifically necessary'. The State overlooks this where it complains that the Court of Appeal has allowed the European Council’s efforts to take precedence over the ETS Directive itself and the conditionality of the EU’s offer to reduce by 30%. [461] The Court of Appeal has not ruled that a conditional EU reduction target of 30% would mean that this percentage would also apply to the Netherlands individually. The complaint in ground for cassation 5.6 based on this assumption therefore does not hold.
grounds for cassation 5.5 and 5.6fail. [462]
inter aliathe EU’s Effort Sharing Decision for distributing the EU emission reductions among the Member States. There is reason to believe that the Netherlands has one of the highest per capita GDPs of the Annex I countries and in any case is far above the average of those countries. That is also evident from Appendix II of the Effort Sharing Decision, in which the Netherlands is allocated a reduction percentage (16% relative to 2005) that is among the highest of the EU Member States. It is therefore reasonable to assume that what applies to the Annex I countries as a whole should at least also apply to the Netherlands.
grounds for cassation 7.1 through 7.5are directed first and foremost against the findings cited above, in particular para. 60. In so far as currently relevant, ground for cassation 7.1 [463] refers to the complaints in
ground for cassation 4.3. These complaints concern the Court of Appeal’s opinion that the reduction target of 25%-40% in AR4 for the Annex I countries as a group also applies to the Netherlands individually.
grounds for cassation 7.1 and 4.3(iii)presume that the Court of Appeal has failed to recognise this, these grounds for cassation must fail.
ground for cassation 7.2. [465] In the Court of Appeal’s opinion, Urgenda has sufficiently substantiated with facts the necessity of the reduction target of 25%-40% in 2020. This target is intended for the Annex I countries, of which the Netherlands is one. The Court of Appeal may then require the State to provide a substantiated rebuttal showing why the Netherlands, as an Annex I country, should have a lower reduction target than the group of Annex I countries as a whole.
grounds for cassation 7.1 and 4.3 (end), 7.3 (section 2) and 7.4, this is not incorrect, inconsistent or otherwise incomprehensible.
grounds for cassation 7.1 and 4.3(i) and (ii)fail. The Court of Appeal also recognised that there are differences between the Annex I countries. [466] The Court of Appeal reasoned why the lower limit of the 25%-40% range of the reduction target for Annex I countries applies to the Netherlands. Therefore, the complaint in
grounds for cassation 7.1 and 4.3(iv)et seq.where these differences are pointed out, fails.
ground for cassation 7.3 (section 1)(see in more detail section 4.93
et seq.).
ground for cassation 7.4). [467] That is true, but this fact does not affect the Court of Appeal’s reasoning. After all, the Court of Appeal is concerned about whether there is reason to assume that the reduction target of at least 25% for the Annex I countries would not apply to the Netherlands. The Court of Appeal has not found such reasons.
ground for cassation 7.5, that the findings in para. 60 deny the State’s discretion to agree with other countries on a distribution of the reduction efforts. The Court of Appeal only offers a factual opinion on the applicability to the Netherlands of the lower limit of the range of the reduction target of 25%-40% for Annex I countries.
Ground for cassation 7.4 (end)also contains a complaint against the finding in para. 26 that of the 33 countries with higher emissions than the Netherlands, only nine have higher emissions per capita. Indeed, the State has argued that, measured in terms of per capita emissions, the Netherlands occupies the 28th position in the global ranking. In doing so, the State based its argument on data from the EDGAR database
'CO2 time series 1990-2014 per capita for world countries'. [468]
grounds for cassation 4.3 and 7.1 through 7.5directed against para. 60 do not hold.
ground for cassation 7.7). These complaints have already been found to fail.
grounds for cassation 4.4 and 7.6). Second, the State argues that it is not necessary for the Netherlands to reduce emissions by at least 25% by 2020, because the EU as a whole will already be doing so (
ground for cassation 5.6). Third, the question is whether the positive effect of the reduction order on Dutch emissions could be offset by opposite effects abroad (
grounds for cassation 8.5.1 and 8.5.2).
No measurable effect on global warming. In cassation, at least for the sake of hypothesis, the following serves as the starting point. [476] The Netherlands accounts for a small share of global greenhouse gas emissions (0.35% in 2014). The addition reduction of Dutch emissions in 2020 would reduce average global warming by 0.000045°C by 2100. This is eliminated entirely in light of all the uncertainties associated with such a calculation and has no measurable impact on the danger of climate change. [477]
ground for cassation 4.4) and (in para. 60) that the reduction target of 25%-40% by 2020 for the Annex I countries as a group should also apply to the Netherlands (
ground for cassation 7.6).
EU will realise the reduction target of 25% by 2020.The Court of Appeal has established that the EU as a whole is expected to realise an emission reduction of 26%-27% by 2020 compared to 1990. [479] The State concludes from this that it cannot be understood why an emission reduction of at least 25% by 2020 by the Netherlands as an individual country is necessary to achieve the 2ºC target and is consistent with the State’s duty of care (see
ground for cassation 5.6, section 5).
‘Carbon leakage’ and ‘waterbed effect’.The effectiveness of the reduction order has also been questioned, because its positive effect on Dutch emissions could be negated by opposite effects abroad. For example, accelerated closure of the Dutch coal-fired power stations could lead to the import of electricity and thereby to increased greenhouse gas emissions abroad. The idea is that, on balance, a reduction order would not lead to any climate benefit, but would only relocate the emission of greenhouse gases from the Netherlands to other countries.
Ground for cassation 8.5.1fails, as it is based on an incorrect interpretation of the Court of Appeal’s judgment. With its finding that ‘other EU Member States will make maximum use of the available emissions allocation under the ETS system', the Court of Appeal refers to the possibility of EU Member States pursuing additional policies. [483] The Court of Appeal discusses this possibility in para. 54. Therefore, contrary to the assumption made in ground for cassation 8.5.1, the Court of Appeal did not consider that EU Member States may limit the number of ETS allowances granted to undertakings in their territory (which will only be possible once Directive 2018/410 has been transposed).
ground for cassation 8.5.2, the State points it - correctly, in itself - that on appeal it explained that the waterbed effect has really emerged, referring to reports by the ECN, for example, the RIVM and the PBL, and to Directive 2018/410. [484] It should be borne in mind, however, that at the end of para. 56, the Court of Appeal renders an opinion on whether the waterbed effect will occur in the future.
ground for cassation 8.5.2does not hold.
grounds for cassation 4.4, 5.6 (para. 5), 7.6, 8.5.1 and 8.5.2are unsuccessful.
ground for cassation 8.2.1). Second, the Court of Appeal allegedly attributed too little significance to measures other than mitigation, such as adaptation measures (
grounds for cassation 8.2.2-8.2.4). Furthermore, according to the State, the Court of Appeal took too little account of the margin of appreciation (
ground for cassation 8.3) and failed to subject the reduction order to a fair balance review and a proportionality review (
ground for cassation 8.4).
Tǎtar/Romania, ECtHR 27 January 2009, no. 67021/01 section 120), precludes the State from pleading that it has to take account of the uncertainties of climate change and other uncertainties (for instance in ground for appeal 8). Those uncertainties could after all imply that, due to the occurrence of a ‘tipping point’ for instance, the situation could become much worse than currently envisioned. The circumstance that full scientific certainty regarding the efficacy of the ordered reduction scenario is lacking therefore does not mean that the State is entitled to refrain from taking further measures. The high plausibility described above suffices.
et alone higher – also preclude such a margin of uncertainty. Incidentally, the percentage of 23% has become more favourable because of the new calculation method of the 2015 NEV, which assumes higher greenhouse gas emissions in 1990 than those which the District Court has taken into consideration. This means that the theoretical reduction percentage can be achieved sooner, although in reality the situation is much more serious (see also para. 21 of this ruling).'
The effectiveness of the order. As stated before, the starting point in cassation is that the additional reduction in Dutch emissions in 2020 will result in a 0.000045 °C reduction in the average global warming until 2100. In our opinion, the State’s complaint that this additional reduction is not ‘necessary’ for this reason does not hold (see sections 4.187-4.197 and 4.202).
ground for cassation 8.2.1 (sections 1 and 2), which is directed against, among other things, para. 59).
be able tocontribute to preventing the threat of human rights being compromised. [487] A guarantee that they will prevent such compromise is not required. By way of comparison, reference can be made to the
Kalender/Turkeyjudgment, which concerned train passengers who had been hit by a cargo train at a train station. The ECtHR ruled that Article 2 ECHR had been violated because basic safety measures, such as a platform and adequate lighting, had not been provided. The ECtHR rejected the defence of the Turkish government that carelessness on the part of the victims was the main cause of the accident. The ECtHR considered in this context that Article 2 ECHR does not offer absolute protection to every person in every risky activity, and, more in particular, does not provide unlimited protection to careless victims. However, this did not exempt the government from its obligation to take at least the most basic safety measures
appropriatefor protecting the lives of the victims (‘
les mesures de sécurité les plus élémentaires susceptibles de préserver la vie des proches des requérants'). [488]
ground for cassation 8.2.1 (sections 3 through 6)fail. The complaint directed against para. 63, as included in section 3 of this ground for cassation, imposes overly stringent requirements on the effectiveness of measures relating to the precautionary principle. The complaints against para. 63 in sections 4 through 6 of this ground for cassation revisit the already rejected assertion that the additional reduction ordered would not be effective in the sense of the ECtHR case law.
Other measures. According to
ground for cassation 8.2.2, the Court of Appeal – without sufficient substantiation – ignored the State's reasoning [490] that, briefly put, adaptation measures are appropriate measures with which the State – whether or not in combination with the mitigation measures taken and proposed by the State – can comply with its positive obligations under Articles 2 and 8 ECHR.
alsoto take adaptation measures, that fact cannot diminish its obligation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions more quickly than it intends to do.
ground for cassation 8.2.3, the Court of Appeal – without sufficient substantiation – ignored the State's reasoning that it was contributing to limiting global greenhouse gas emissions by supplying knowledge and financial resources to developing countries, with which those countries could take mitigation and adaptation measures.
ground for cassation 8.2.4, the Court of Appeal did not rule in para. 73 that adaptation measures, climate financing and supporting other countries could not be safe measures.
Margin of appreciation.As discussed in Chapter 2, the ECtHR in certain cases allows national authorities some discretion in determining the manner in which the State wishes to comply with its obligations under the ECHR. In its concluding para. 74, the Court of Appeal ruled that the State's reliance on its discretion does not apply to the question of whether Dutch emissions should be reduced by 25% by 2020. To that end, the Court of Appeal referred to the grounds for its decision given earlier in its judgment, which the Court of Appeal summarised in paras. 71 to 73. The State
doeshave the discretion, according to the Court of Appeal, to determine which measures should be taken to achieve the reduction target in 2020.
et seq.
Ground for cassation 8.3builds on that.
grounds for cassation 8.3.1, 8.3.2 and 8.3.3fail. The same applies to
ground for cassation 8.3.4, in which the conclusions drawn from scientific reports are used to argued that the State has discretion with regard to the reduction path. This argument also fails on the basis of the lower limit referred to by the Court of Appeal.
ground for cassation 8.3.5, it is argued that the question of whether or not to take more expensive or more drastic measures falls within the scope of the State's discretion.
Ground for cassation 8.3.6tries to assert the complaints of grounds for cassation 8.3.3-8.3.5 against paras. 67-69 and fails because those grounds for cassation fail.
Ground for cassation 8.3.7concerns the word 'desirable' in para. 47 and fails for the reasons mentioned in section 4.166
et seq. [496] Ground for cassation 8.3.8refers to ground for cassation 2 and fails for the reasons mentioned in section 3.2
et seq.
Fair balance and proportionality. As discussed in Chapter 2, the ECtHR reviews in the context of Article 8 ECHR whether the State's choice of measures within its 'margin of appreciation' struck a 'fair balance' between the individual and public interests involved. Furthermore, Articles 2 and 8 ECHR must be interpreted in a manner that does not impose an 'impossible or disproportionate burden' on the government. [497]
ground for cassation 8.4, the Court of Appeal failed to review this, or at least failed to do so in a discernible manner. The State put forward assertions on (i) the extremely limited effect of further Dutch emission reductions in 2020 and (ii) the extremely high costs (societal and otherwise) of the measures required for that purpose. According to the grounds for cassation, this shows that there is a disproportionate or unreasonable relationship between the reduction measures required of the State and their effect on individuals and society as a whole, or at least that the Court of Appeal's opinion in this respect was insufficiently substantiated.
et seq.Indeed, the Court of Appeal's opinion implies that a reduction of 25% in 2020 is the lower limit of what can be expected from the State with a view to the risk of dangerous climate change. Since there is no 'margin of appreciation' for the State below that limit, no separate 'fair balance' review was necessary.
ground for cassation 8.4that the Court of Appeal failed to establish which specific risks specific groups of persons will be exposed to, and within which specific time frame, we refer to the discussion of grounds for cassation 1.2 and 2 in section 3.2
et seq.
grounds for cassation 8.2.1-8.2.4, 8.3 and 8.4on the application of the ECHR fail.
Ground for cassation 5.2 (first section)contains a further complaint about the substantiation of the finding (in paras. 12 and 40 of the Court of Appeal's judgment) that the 450 ppm scenario – i.e. the situation in which the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere will eventually stabilise at around 450 ppm – still offers no more than a 50% probability ('more likely than not') of achieving the 2ºC target. According to the complaint, that finding is incomprehensible because that probability (the percentage) cannot be found in the AR4 report.
Precautionary principle.
Ground for cassation 8.6concerns the reference to the precautionary principle in paras. 63 and 73 of the Court of Appeal's judgment. The ground for cassation argues that the precautionary principle cannot form an independent basis for assuming positive obligations on the part of the State by virtue of Article 2 and/or Article 8 ECHR, or unlawful conduct, but can only play a role in substantively interpreting the State's positive obligations.
et seq.).
Relativity. The term relativity usually refers to one of the requirements for liability arising from unlawful conduct, in the sense that an unlawful act has been committed 'against another party' (Article 6:162 DCC). Unlawful acts are committed against another party if, briefly put, (i) a personal right of that other party is infringed (e.g. the other party's right of ownership), affecting that other party's interests protected by that subjective right; (ii) a statutory standard meant to protect the affected interests of the other party is violated; or (iii) an unwritten standard meant to protect the affected interest of the other party is violated (see the three categories of unlawful acts referred to in section 2.14). The liability arising from unlawful conduct can be further defined by means of the relativity requirement. [510]
et seq. [511]
ground for cassation 8.7.1, this cannot be interpreted as meaning that the Court of Appeal ruled that the relativity requirement need not be met as such. Ground for cassation 8.7.1 therefore does not hold.
et seq.). The Court of Appeal expressed this by referring to 'the interests of Urgenda('s constituents'). As addressed in the discussion of ground for cassation 2, we believe that the Court of Appeal cannot be required to specify which risks climate change causes for specific or practically identifiable persons or groups of persons located within the jurisdiction of the State (see the discussion of grounds for cassation 1.1 and 2 in section 3.2
et seq.). Therefore, the complaints of
ground for cassation 8.7.2fail.
The time remaining.
Ground for cassation 8.8targets para. 66, in which the Court of Appeal ruled that the State cannot use as a defence the circumstance that the remaining time until 2020 is very short to take the measures needed to achieve additional emissions reductions. The complaints of ground for cassation 8.8 apply this finding to, briefly put, the question of whether the State has complied with its obligations under Article 2 and/or Article 8 ECHR. However, the contested finding of the Court of Appeal does not relate to those aspects of the case, so that the complains fail.
Ground for cassation 8.10contains a complaint in the event that the Court of Appeal (in paras. 3.5, 44, 50 and 73) based the State's duty of care partly on the consequences of a global temperature increase of 1.5 °C (or more, but no more than 2 °C).
Merely elaborative complaints. For the remainder,
grounds for cassation 5.1, 5.2, 5.3, 5.4, 5.6, 5.7, 6.4, 7.1, 8.1, 8.7.2, 8.8, 8.9 and 8.11contain undiscussed complaints that merely elaborate on other complaints. These follow-up complaints no longer require separate discussion.
grounds for cassation 4 through 8fail, or at least cannot lead to cassation.
5.The constitutional lawfulness of the order (ground for cassation 9)
Introduction
trias politica. In the Constitution of the Netherlands, the legislative, executive and judicial powers are regulated by different chapters. However, this separation is not very strict in the Dutch system of government. [519] Many Dutch authors therefore prefer to talk about the 'balance' between the three state powers and about constitutional 'checks and balances'. [520] This does not change the fact that an important criticism of the District Court's judgment was that the court should have left the decision on the extent and pace of emissions reduction to the legislature and the executive. [521] This criticism also affects the decision on appeal. [522] This was one of the reasons why the State lodged an appeal in cassation. [523]
de jureor
de factoimpossible to take reduction measures that go beyond those included in the existing climate policy of the Dutch government. Nor did the State rely upon Article 6:168(1) DCC, which in principle makes it possible for the court to reject a claim aimed at prohibiting an unlawful act on the grounds that this act must be tolerated on account of 'compelling social interests'. In fact, in the District Court’s opinion, the opposite is true in this case: on the basis of the established facts, it is necessary for the State to take more far-reaching measures to be able to achieve the 2ºC target (District Court's judgment, para. 4.99).
trias politicado not stand in the way of an order as given in the judgment (District Court's judgment, para. 4.102).
trias politicaand on the role of the courts in our constitution. The State believes that the role of the court stands in the way of imposing an order on the State, as was done by the district court. This defence does not hold water. The Court is obliged to apply provisions with direct effect of treaties to which the Netherlands is party, including Articles 2 and 8 ECHR. After all, such provisions form part of the Dutch jurisdiction and even take precedence over Dutch laws that deviate from them.' (para. 69).
Marbury v. Madison(1803) is usually designated as the starting point for this doctrine. The underlying dispute does not need to be discussed here. [527] The U.S. Supreme Court was faced with the question of whether the separation of the three state powers in the U.S. Constitution precluded the court's granting of a remedy. The following consideration is important to understand the notion of a 'political question':
Baker v. Carr. [528] In short, the dispute concerned a decision on the geographic layout of an electoral district, which decision would or would not be contrary to the principle of equality. The substantiation sets out a series of perspectives on the basis of which it is possible to establish whether a specific case pertains to a political question that is entirely outside the scope of judicial review:
Baker v. Carrcan also be identified in professional literature on US lawsuits in which the consequences of climate change were addressed. [531] One author asserts that international courts are less prepared than national courts to refrain from a substantive assessment of a dispute on the grounds that it concerns the exercise of a political power. [532] If that assertion is true, it could be explained by the circumstance that the political question doctrine relates to the
internalrelationships between the three state powers. [533]
Baker v. Carras follows: (i) the dispute concerns a subject that was assigned to one of the other two state powers by or by virtue of the U.S. Constitution; (ii) there are insufficient clear and objective criteria on the basis of which the dispute could be resolved; (iii) a substantive assessment could interfere with the functioning and previous political decisions of the other state powers. [534] A similar abridged description was used in a judgment rendered by the Preliminary Relief Judge of the District Court of Amsterdam on the Brexit problem:
de jure, and/or whether a court judgment would interfere with the possibility of another competent state power to form a political opinion on the matter.' [535]
trias politica'. [536] This brings us to the question of whether the laws of the Netherlands include an exception for political issues to the main rule that provides access to the courts.
jurisdictionof the civil courts, under Dutch law, is independent from the question of whether the claim raises a political issue. Since 1915, the rule in the Netherlands has been that the civil courts determine their jurisdiction on the basis of the law on which the claimant bases its claim [537] rather than on the nature of the dispute and whether it pertains to public or private law. If the claimant bases its claim on a violation or impending violation of a right to which it is entitled or on an unlawful act committed against it, the civil courts do, in principle, have jurisdiction to take cognisance of that claim and render a substantive opinion on it. This also applies when the claim is directed against the State. [538]
trias politica(the interrelationship between the three state powers), the judiciary has traditionally been the one to investigate the facts, apply the law to the facts and, if necessary, interpret the law. The basic assumption is therefore clear: the judiciary assesses whether the acts or omissions of the State and its bodies are lawful or unlawful. The efficiency of the State's actions and of its government policy can be assessed by parliament, if necessary after an investigation by, for example, the Netherlands Audit Office. The General Provisions on Kingdom Legislation Act (
Bulletin of Acts and Decrees1829, 28) considers the judiciary's obligation to follow the law to be of paramount importance: 'The courts must administer justice in accordance with the law; under no circumstances may they assess the inner value or fairness of the law.' (Article 11). [540]
areregulated by the law. [541] This minimises the risk of collisions within the
trias politica. [542] The legislature and the executive cannot change the judicial decision in the adjudged case, which has
res judicataforce only in respect of the parties to the proceedings. If the executive does not like the outcome due to it setting a possible precedent, the legislature may reformulate the relevant statutory provisions or choose to adopt an entirely new statutory provision on the subject for other, future cases.
trias politicaincreases. Courts are cautious in doing so. However, Articles 93 and 94 of the Constitution – discussed in sections 2.27 and 2.28 above – provide that a court may be forced to apply a 'binding' treaty provision directly. If a court finds that a Dutch statutory provision is incompatible with an applicable 'binding' treaty provision, it will exclude the application of that provision to that extent. [543] In some cases, excluding the application of the national statutory provision is sufficient to obtain effective legal protection. If the applicable 'binding' treaty provision only allows one outcome, the court may apply that treaty provision instead of the national provision. But there are also cases where the mere exclusion of the application of the national statutory provision is insufficient and there are multiple conceivable options to fill the resulting gap. In such cases, the court must decide whether it will fill that legal gap itself by choosing from those options and formulating of its own volition the legal rule by which the case in question can be adjudged. The alternative is that the court leaves it to the legislature to bring the national legislation in line with the applicable treaty provisions. [544] This problem was the subject of much debate in the Netherlands in the 1980s. [545]
cf.Supreme Court 8 June 2018, ECLI:NL:HR:2018:846, para. 2.5.1). In that case, the judiciary will exercise restraint towards the legislature in providing for such a legal gap at system level. In principle, there is no place for judicial intervention unless an individual taxpayer is faced with an individual and excessive burden in violation of Article 1 FP [...].'
gouvernement des juges'. [550] In the Netherlands, judges are appointed rather than elected by the people. A central theme in this debate is the 'principle of democracy': the decision on whether to create legislation and on the substance of a law to be enacted is reserved for parliament. The principle of democracy leads to a restrained attitude on the part of the judiciary towards the actions of the other two state powers. In previous disputes on the possibility of judicial review, the Supreme Court referred to 'the position of the judiciary in our constitution, as also expressed in Article 11 of the General Provisions on Kingdom Legislation Act'. [551]
trias politicadoctrine does not mean that the judiciary may never 'assume the role of the executive' in proceedings where the government is a party. In fact, Dutch administrative procedural law offers this possibility. When the administrative court declares an appeal to be well-founded and sets aside the contested decision of an administrative body, it can among other things stipulate:
NJ2004/329. That case concerned objections by the
Vereniging van Juristen voor de Vrede(Association of Lawyers for Peace, VJV) and other interest groups against the Dutch government's intention to cooperate in proposed military actions of the government of the United States at the time. They claimed an injunction prohibiting such cooperation and an order against the State. The Preliminary Relief Court and Court of Appeal both rejected the claims. The Supreme Court upheld that decision. The Supreme Court's principal ground reads as follows:
et al.also based their claims, does not lead to a different opinion. While that Article contains an instruction to the government to promote the international rule of law, neither it nor any other articles stipulate how the government should carry out that instruction. In that context, the Supreme Court notes that the relevant claims of VJV
et al.pertain to questions concerning the policy of the State in the areas of foreign policy and defence, which policy strongly depends on political considerations in connection with the circumstances of the case. Even in the case of a ban on violence, it is not up to the civil court to make these political considerations and to prohibit the State (government) from taking certain actions to implement its political decisions in the areas of foreign policy or defence, or order the State to follow a certain course of action in those areas, all on the demand of a citizen.' (para. 3.4).
trias politica) prevents the court from issuing an order to the State to create legislation or amend or repeal an existing Act of Parliament has already been answered by the Supreme Court.
Waterpaktjudgment, which the State has relied upon in these proceedings. At the request of Stichting Waterpakt
et al., the State was ordered by the District Court, briefly put, to take such measures as to ensure that the standard for the use of animal manure (210 kg of nitrogen per agricultural or livestock farm per hectare) would be met in the year 2002. This standard was derived from a Directive of the European Union (the Nitrate Directive), which had not been implemented in time in Dutch legislation. The Court of Appeal set aside this judgment on appeal and denied the order sought, holding that 'by virtue of its constitutional position, the court is not free to intervene in the primary legislative process in the manner purported by this claim. This purport also precludes the ordering of substantive legislation because it is closely interwoven with primary legislation’.
et al.asked the Supreme Court whether Dutch law prevents the court from ordering the State to create legislation to put a stop to an unlawful situation. The Supreme Court held:
Waterpaktjudgment and added the following:
Waterpakt/State), the court lacks the jurisdiction to order the State to enact primary legislation. This was unsuccessfully contested in Clara Wichmann
et al.'s Grounds for Cross-Appeal in Cassation in both cases. Aside from the fact that Clara Wichmann
et al. have not indicated which other specific measures the State could take, aside from the subsidy ban to be discussed below, there is no room in this case concerning the relationship between the State and a political party for a court order to take specific measures in order to comply with Article 7 of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, because the choice of such measures to be taken by the State requires a consideration of interests that coincides to such a degree with considerations of a political nature that it cannot be demanded from the court. (…)'
cf. section 5.33 above). The claimants (Norma
et al.) argued that the State's choice not to designate certain audio and video equipment as taxable was in conflict with a Directive of the European Union. On that basis, the court on appeal found the lack of a designation to be unlawful, in the form of a judicial declaration as referred to in Article 3:302 DCC. The Supreme Court held, among other things:
cf.Supreme Court 1 October 2004, [...] (
Faunabescherming/Friesland)). The judicial declaration that the issue of orders in council against Norma
et al.is unlawful because it contravenes the Copyright Act and Neighbouring Rights Act, which must both be interpreted in accordance with the Copyright Directive, lacks the character of an order to enact legislation. After all, the judicial declaration applies only to Norma
et al.and does not mean that the orders in council must be amended or repealed. The judicial declaration furthermore leaves the State plenty of room to provide for legislation that is in accordance with the aforementioned Directive and statutory provisions, so that it does not affect the State's discretionary power.' [565]
human rightsis more than merely a claim for the satisfaction of one’s own political choices. In a state under rule of law, the fundamental rights of all must be respected, even when taking a decision by majority:
fundamentalrights cannot be ‘outvoted’.
Waterpaktcase law. This argument carries less weight in a case like the present, in which the court merely determines the very minimum that any legislation enacted must satisfy – in connection with the State’s positive obligations ensuing from Articles 2 and 8 ECHR – and otherwise leaves the decision as to whether legislation is enacted and, if so, its substance entirely to the competent political bodies.
Baker v. Carr, an investigation would also be required to determine whether issuing a court order for another state power in the
trias politicaimpedes the possibility of forming an opinion on the matter. At first glance, this would appear not to be the case: a reduction obligation of 25% for the year 2020 – a short-term obligation – in itself does not obstruct the reduction targets for the year 2030 or for the year 2050 – the long term – that is the State’s premise. Nor does the ordered reduction target of 25% in 2020 obstruct the target for 2020 agreed within the EU context. Moreover, this concerns
minimumreduction targets that do not prevent the State from reducing the emission of greenhouse gases in the Netherlands further and/or at an earlier point in time. [579] However, the reduction order issued does make it necessary to hasten the reduction efforts that the State intended to spread out over the period until 2030 (and until 2050, respectively). To that extent, the order issued does impact the freedom of action of the political bodies. The Court of Appeal acknowledged this aspect (see paras. 47 and 66-74).
de factowithout enacting legislation.
de factoby enacting legislation - is also inadmissible if the order does not prescribe the
substanceof the legislation to be enacted.
withoutenacting legislation. The basis for the Court of Appeal's opinion that the State has insufficiently refuted Urgenda's arguments on this point is also impossible to understand. If the Court of Appeal assumed that the State argued that compliance with the reduction order is
exclusivelypossible by enacting legislation, then, according to this part of the ground for cassation, this interpretation of the defence conducted is incomprehensible in view of the arguments put forward by the State on appeal.
Howthe State complies with that order - with or without legislation - is of no concern to Urgenda, as long as the emissions reduction as ordered is realised.
notentail an order to enact legislation.
de facto,the State cannot comply with the order issued by District Court without enacting legislation. According to ground for cassation 9.2, this order should therefore be equated with an unlawful order to enact legislation.
Waterpaktcase law, in these proceedings it has not been established that the State cannot comply with the order other than by enacting legislation. Assuming, with the State, that its own contribution to the emission of greenhouse gases is only a relatively small part of the total emission of greenhouse gases in the Netherlands, the State will have to take measures, in addition to those within its own organisation, to limit other emissions by residents of the Netherlands and companies operating in the Netherlands. The national authority has various options for influencing people’s and companies’ behaviour. Legislation is only one of those options. Other examples include: providing information, influencing opinions and awareness, [584] stimulating sustainable products, working methods and ways of life and projects to promote the same, if necessary at the expense of financial or other State support for activities that generate significant greenhouse gas emissions; defining conditions directed at sustainability in tendering procedures or the grant of permits; spatial planning; physical infrastructure measures; pursuing sustainability policies in the areas of nature, agriculture and fishing; etc. Obviously, this list is not exhaustive.
collectively by means of all of the measures.In itself, this gave no cause not to apply the
Waterpaktcase law: the
Waterpaktcase also concerned a minimum level – 210 kg nitrogen – albeit that this minimum level was not derived from the ECHR by the court itself, but had been laid down in an EU Directive.
allof the measures in compliance with the order, but at most a part of those measures [585] andassuming that the competent political bodies have complete freedom to determine the measures for which legislation will be enacted and in respect of the substance of such legislation, the Court of Appeal was entitled to arrive at its opinion that there is insufficient cause to equate the District Court's order with an unlawful order to enact legislation. The Court of Appeal left the political deliberations on whether legislation will be enacted where they belong: with the legislature and the executive.
onlycomply with the reduction order by means of enacting legislation. In that regard, the assumption at the end of this part of the grounds for cassation lacks any basis in fact. In so far as the State argued on appeal that legislation is – also – needed to comply with the reduction order issued, the contested opinion is not incomprehensible. As explained, the Court of Appeal left the weighing of interests necessary in respect of the question of whether certain formal or substantive legislation will be enacted, and the substance of any such legislation, to the competent political bodies. This is why the Court of Appeal was not required to discuss the State’s individual policy measures merely mentioned as possibilities by the State in its Statement of Appeal. The State's argument that the time it has left until the end of 2020 to realise the emissions reduction ordered by the District Court is very short was considered by the Court of Appeal and rejected in para. 66. That opinion is not incomprehensible, also in light of the District Court's ruling in para. 4.99 that the State did not assert either factual or legal arguments in the first instance indicating the impossibility of its taking more far-reaching measures, while the District Court also pointed out the EU's conditional offer to realise a 30% reduction by the end of 2020.
as part of any imaginable package of measuresin order to comply with the court order, we would note the following. If that position were to be accepted, then the Court of Appeal would have had to make a distinction between the measures requiring legislation – to be equated with an unlawful order to enact legislation – and the measures for which legislation is not required, which cannot be equated with an unlawful order to enact legislation. It is precisely because the State furnished insufficient facts on this point, in the opinion of the Court of Appeal, that the Court of Appeal was unable to make this distinction. If the order to be issued were to be equated with an unlawful order to enact legislation within the meaning of the
Waterpaktcase law on the basis of the bare assertion that enacting legislation is unavoidable
de factoas part of a package of measures, then the national court would also be unable to provide effective protection of rights in respect of measures that do not require legislation to be enacted, as well. In that event, only the possibility of a complaint with the ECtHR in Strasbourg would remain for individual applicants who are of the opinion that the State is not complying with its positive obligations under Article 2 and/or Article 8 ECHR. Extrapolating the
Waterpaktcase law to that extent as advocated by the State is unacceptable for that reason.
notequated by the Supreme Court with an unlawful order to enact legislation. The State’s need for a wide margin of discretion or appreciation – a wide margin of appreciation, as the State terms it – is important for the reasons that were already discussed in section 5.48. This does not mean that the Court of Appeal was required to accommodate the State's need more than it has.
obligation to perform, albeit non-enforceable. They consider the reduction target for 2030 of 49% for 2030 to be a best-efforts obligation for the Ministers involved:
now. Should the Court of Appeal have left the decision regarding the speed of reduction and the reduction of emissions in the Netherlands to the political bodies instead of upholding the District Court’s order?
now(meaning on 9 October 2018). To that extent, the Court of Appeal endorsed Urgenda’s position. The Court of Appeal held: ‘The later actions are taken to reduce [...] the more ambitious the measures must be at that later stage, as acknowledged by the State [...]'. Put differently: the longer the State waits with reducing emissions, ultimately leading – according to both parties – to the targets for 2030 and 2050, the more drastic the measures that the State must take must be (and we add: which will then have to be borne by Dutch society). This reasoning was necessarily abstractly formulated by the Court of Appeal, [589] and is otherwise not incomprehensible, also in light of the characteristics of climate change described above. The weighing of interests by the Court of Appeal referred to in section 5.70 cannot be assessed in proceedings for cassation, as it is too intricately entwined with the assessment of the facts. It is not incomprehensible.
6.Closing considerations
in abstracto. The case concerns the question of whether Urgenda’s claim could be granted, and therefore the question of whether the emission of greenhouse gases in 2020 must be at least 25% lower than in 1990. The technical climatological substantiation of the reduction order was the central topic of Chapter 4. The scientific reports entered into evidence in these proceedings unmistakeably demonstrate the necessity of reducing global emissions of greenhouse gases more than is currently the case, given the 2ºC target. This also applies to reductions by the Netherlands in the short term (2020), according to the Court of Appeal.
divisionof the reduction efforts needed worldwide cannot be defined in terms of physics, but it can be reasoned using broad, common normative premises that are embedded in the UNFCCC, for example. Scientists specialised in the field made proposals to that end, which were translated in the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) into a reduction objective of 25%-40% in 2020 for the Annex I countries as a group, of which the Netherlands is a part. This target acquired support from later decisions adopted by the Conference of the Parties: the supreme body of the UNFCCC (known as ‘COP decisions’). Until 2011, the premise for the Netherlands was a reduction target of 30% in 2020, but this was abandoned for the benefit of an objective of 20% agreed within the EU context, while the new objective was not evidently based on climatological insights. In our opinion, this gave the Court of Appeal sufficient points of reference for its opinion that the reduction by the Netherlands in 2020 must be at least 25%.
allof the measures in compliance with the order, but at most a part of those measures, and assuming that the competent political bodies have complete freedom to determine the measures for which legislation will be enacted and in respect of the substance of such legislation, the Court of Appeal was entitled to arrive at its opinion that there is insufficient cause to equate the District Court's order with an unlawful order to enact legislation. The Court of Appeal left the political deliberations on whether legislation will be enacted where they belong: with the legislature and the executive.
judicial declarations(see para. 3.1 of the District Court’s judgment). The District Court did not address these claims due to a lack of interest, as the District Court already granted the reduction order. [595] In its judgment’s operative part at 5.5, the District Court denied all other or further claims. The Court of Appeal held that Urgenda’s other claims were no longer at issue on appeal (para. 3.9). We are assuming that this latter opinion does not concern the judicial declarations sought, but exclusively relates to the other claims that the District Court had denied, at least in part on substantive grounds (to the extent relevant here: a 40% reduction order and an order to provide information). [596]