Why climate lawsuits are increasing worldwide

Why More Climate Lawsuits Are Being Filed Globally

Societies are increasingly turning to the courts to confront climate change, and the past decade has seen a sharp rise in climate‑related litigation fueled by escalating impacts, more robust scientific links between emissions and damage, evolving legal arguments, activist tactics, and changes in corporate and financial governance; this article outlines the primary drivers behind these cases, the legal avenues plaintiffs pursue, key illustrative examples, emerging geographic trends, and the practical implications for governments, businesses, and communities.

Key forces fueling the growth of climate litigation

  • More robust scientific attribution: Progress in attribution research and climate modeling increasingly enables experts to connect particular extreme events and long-term climate damages to human-driven greenhouse gas emissions, and courts are more frequently accepting these approaches as valid evidence of causation and risk.
  • Escalating and highly visible climate impacts: Intensifying storms, floods, wildfires, heatwaves, sea-level rise, and droughts generate clear losses and displacement, prompting individuals, communities, and governments to turn to legal avenues as damages continue to grow.
  • Policy shortfalls and perceived governmental inaction: When lawmakers or regulators appear to fall short of domestic targets or international obligations, litigants increasingly seek judicial intervention to strengthen climate measures or to contest approvals granted to fossil-fuel initiatives.
  • Emerging legal arguments: Attorneys are invoking human rights frameworks, tort principles such as public and private nuisance, public trust doctrines, consumer protection rules, corporate disclosure requirements, and statutory enforcement tools to address climate-related harms, widening the spectrum of potential defendants and remedies.
  • Strategic litigation and coordinated efforts: NGOs, law firms, youth coalitions, and public-interest organizations organize prominent cases aimed at shaping precedent, influencing public discussion, or driving policy reforms, using litigation as a deliberate strategic instrument rather than solely as a means of obtaining compensation.
  • Investor and market-driven pressures: Investors, pension funds, and financial regulators initiate actions or pressure companies regarding climate-risk governance and disclosure, and worries about stranded assets and fiduciary responsibilities heighten litigation risks for corporations and their leadership.
  • Improved data access and reduced mobilization costs: Satellite observations, open emissions databases, digital scientific tools, pro bono legal networks, and crowdfunding platforms allow plaintiffs to gather evidence and secure resources for litigation with far greater ease.

Common legal strategies and claim types

  • Human rights claims — contending that insufficient climate measures infringe on the rights to life, health, property, or a secure environment.
  • Public trust and administrative law actions — urging courts to compel governments to safeguard natural resources or comply with statutory duties when authorizing developments.
  • Tort claims (nuisance, negligence) — pursuing compensation from fossil-fuel entities for damages purportedly linked to their practices or products.
  • Corporate disclosure and securities litigation — asserting that companies provided investors with misleading information regarding climate-related threats or corporate transition strategies.
  • Regulatory and permitting challenges — aiming to halt fossil-fuel infrastructure through administrative objections and judicial assessments.
  • Climate-specific statutory enforcement — applying emissions rules, air-quality requirements, or consumer-protection laws to obtain legal remedies.

Notable cases and benchmarks

  • Massachusetts v. EPA (U.S., 2007) — a foundational U.S. Supreme Court decision that confirmed greenhouse gases are air pollutants under the Clean Air Act and that the executive branch must consider regulation. The decision enabled later regulatory and litigation pathways.
  • Urgenda Foundation v. State of the Netherlands (2015; Supreme Court 2019) — a landmark case in which Dutch courts ordered the government to adopt stronger emissions reductions on human-rights and negligence grounds. Urgenda established that courts could require governments to meet concrete emission-reduction obligations.
  • Milieudefensie et al. v. Royal Dutch Shell (The Hague, 2021) — a district court ordered Shell to reduce its global CO2 emissions by 45% by 2030 (relative to 2019), including emissions from customers’ use of its products. The ruling expanded potential corporate responsibility for value-chain emissions.
  • Leghari v. Federation of Pakistan (2015) — Pakistan’s courts recognized that failure to implement climate policy violated constitutional rights and required institutional reforms, illustrating judicial activism in the Global South.
  • Juliana v. United States (youth climate litigation) — a high-profile youth-led challenge that drew international attention to intergenerational justice, even where procedural hurdles and standing limited ultimate remedies in U.S. federal courts.

Current trends and insights

  • Rapid growth in case numbers: Academic and legal trackers such as the Sabin Center at Columbia University and other databases report thousands of climate-related cases globally, with significant acceleration since the mid-2010s. Litigation types expanded from government policy challenges to invasive corporate-targeted claims and investor suits.
  • Regional diversity: Initially concentrated in high-income jurisdictions (United States, Europe), climate litigation has grown in the Global South and across international forums. Courts in Asia, Africa, and Latin America are increasingly engaged, often in matters tied to human rights and development impacts.
  • Sectoral focus: Many cases target the fossil-fuel industry, but litigation also addresses utilities, insurers, asset managers, and governments responsible for permitting and regulation.

Why courts are seen as attractive venues

  • Addressing perceived shortcomings in democratic action: When voters or lawmakers seem either incapable of or reluctant to tackle climate threats effectively, plaintiffs view the courts as a valid forum for securing binding obligations.
  • Binding judicial results: Court directives may mandate emissions cuts, reshape policies, or award financial damages, delivering tangible outcomes that advocacy efforts or lobbying often fail to produce.
  • Precedent building and ripple effects: Even limited victories can establish legal benchmarks, trigger regulatory initiatives, and shape corporate conduct beyond the immediate parties through reputational impacts and shifts in governance.

Challenges, limits, and judicial reservations

  • Standing and justiciability: Courts frequently confront questions about whether plaintiffs possess the requisite standing and whether judicial venues are suitable for resolving expansive policy matters, as some legal systems restrict courts from addressing broad policy choices left to elected officials.
  • Complex causation and attribution: Plaintiffs are required to associate particular parties or government measures with widespread, systemic damage; although attribution science has advanced, tying a defendant’s specific actions to a claimant’s harm remains both technically and legally challenging.
  • Enforcement hurdles: Even when judicial directives are issued, ensuring compliance across timelines, oversight mechanisms, and cross-border implications can prove demanding.
  • Costs and procedural barriers: Legal disputes often consume significant resources and extend over long periods, with defendants frequently deploying extensive defenses or lodging appeals that slow the path to resolution.

Implications for governments, businesses, and investors

  • Policy acceleration: Litigation increases political and regulatory urgency. Governments may strengthen climate laws to reduce litigation risk or comply with court orders.
  • Corporate risk management: Firms face pressures to improve emissions disclosures, integrate climate risks into governance, and adjust investment plans to reduce exposure to legal action and reputational harm.
  • Financial sector vigilance: Banks, insurers, and asset managers revise underwriting and portfolio strategies to avoid litigation-linked losses and to satisfy fiduciary duties.
  • Market signaling: High-profile rulings change market expectations about liabilities, potentially affecting valuations of high-emissions assets.

What to watch next

  • Expansion of human-rights and public-trust litigation: Anticipate a growing wave of actions asserting that governments and corporations must safeguard essential rights against climate-related impacts.
  • Cross-border and transnational suits: With global supply networks and investor activities overlapping, cases that span multiple legal systems or rely on international venues are likely to rise.
  • Regulatory reform and disclosure enforcement: Judicial bodies may more frequently apply or interpret emerging climate-reporting standards and financial rules, making accurate disclosures and governance practices increasingly vital for businesses.
  • Strategic settlements and compliance plans: Numerous parties are expected to pursue settlements or structured agreements that incorporate emissions objectives and adaptation.