Global warming: sue the US now

Stephen Timms
Wednesday July 25, 2001
The Guardian

When all else fails, go to court. That could be the conclusion of
exasperated poor countries as the rich world falls out over how to
deal with climate change - and the biggest polluter, the United
States, still refuses to play. If the negotiations in Bonn on the
Kyoto protocol had been about forming an orchestra we would now have
one viola player, a broken tuba and a half-written musical score.

As the millions made homeless by last week's floods in Orissa, India,
showed again, poor countries suffer most from the increasingly
unpredictable and extreme weather delivered by global warming. And,
the weakened Kyoto protocol offers them little. At best there is an
over-hyped "clean development mechanism", a device to help poor
countries leapfrog dirty development, and the vague promise of
adaptation funds.

A logical climate deal would start by agreeing a maximum allowable
level of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere and then aim to contract
emissions to meet the target. It would also concede that all people
have a basic and equal entitlement to the air above their heads.
Nations would then converge their emissions, allowing poor countries
to develop and making rich countries live within their environmental
budget. But in the meantime, and as the climate keeps getting worse,
what should the countries suffering most, or making the most effort,
do about the US?

One of the most basic principles in law is that if someone does you
harm, two things should happen. First, the aggressor should stop what
they are doing and, second, they should provide compensation for the
harm they have caused. Apply this most simple principle to the
turbulent theatre of international relations and a startling picture
emerges.

The UN environment programme estimates that the extra economic costs
of disasters attributable to climate change - floods, storms,
hurricanes - are running at more than $300bn annually. The best guess
of development groups is that climate change could cost developing
countries up to �6.5 trillion over the next 20 years. A former
director of insurance giant CGNU plotted a graph to see when climate
change would bankrupt the global economy. He concluded that we have
less than a lifetime left, just over half a century.

But it could be even worse than that. Economist Paul Freeman is quoted
in the recent International Red Cross World Disasters Report 2001
suggesting that the indirect and secondary impacts of disasters "may
be twice the size of the direct losses".

The prospects for poor countries look so bleak that we could be
experiencing the end of development. The trickle of investment they
receive focuses on exploiting natural resources. Getting the resources
to tackle climate change seems impossible. But there is an action of
last resort. A group of especially threatened small island states, or
a country like Bangladesh, could act as the focus for a test case for
the emerging international legal architecture. Perhaps it is time to
take the US to court.

It could happen in a variety of ways. But, even if existing legal
machinery proved ineffective, we could follow the successful example
of the international criminal court and create a new legal forum.

Law professor Andrew Strauss has highlighted several avenues that
point toward possible legal action. The UN general assembly could
request an advisory opinion from the international court of justice.
Countries committed to realistic action on cutting emissions might
view the US cheap energy policy as an insidious subsidy and implement
anti-subsidy duties. The US's legal remedy would then be dispute
resolution at the World Trade Organisation, where multilateral
attempts to use trade measures for environmental issues are viewed
more positively than purely unilateral action.

There are also useful precedents. A now classic case that arose over
pollution from a Canadian smelter plant polluting Washington State in
the US led, through arbitration, to the principle that states had a
duty to protect other states, and that no state had the right to act
in a way that might cause injury by "fumes" to another. Under the UN
international law commission's draft declaration on state
responsibility, US greenhouse gas emissions could constitute an
international crime.

The US is the most obvious candidate, but all industrialised countries
whose emissions are, per person, above a sustainable threshold should
be looking over their shoulders. The next message G7 heads of state
receive from their poorer cousins may not be an invitation to a
reception, or a plea for more aid. It may be much more abrupt: "We'll
see you in court for global warming."

. Stephen Timms works for the New Economics Foundation

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