TLDR on Climate Litigation Trends from the NGFS

Climate-related litigation will likely expand beyond climate change to biodiversity loss.

The Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS), an organisation that facilitates collaboration among central banks and financial regulators globally, recently released a report entitled Climate-related litigation: recent trends and developments. It’s not a long read, but here’s the TLDR version we put together:

  • There is an increase in climate litigation across the board for states and public entities, non-financial corporations, and financial institutions.

  • Claims have been brought against companies in fossil fuels and energy, transportation, mining, agriculture and food, plastics, construction, and building materials.

  • Claims against states and public entities focus on:

    • Systemic climate litigation - states are failing to address climate-related human rights,

    • Decisions incentivising third parties - states are allowing fossil projects to proceed,

    • Procedural obligations - states must provide data and transparency, and

    • Supervisor obligations - regulators should be regulating

  • Claims against non-financial corporations focus on:

    • Human rights

    • Tort law, aka public nuisance

    • Due diligence on risk disclosures

    • Damages linked to GHG emissions (which is increasingly possible with advancements in attribution science)

    • Greenwashing, aka misleading customers

    • Company law, where NGOs become shareholders and claim that company is not meeting fiduciary obligations

  • Legal risks include increases in litigation costs

  • Claims against financial institutions focus on:

    • Greenwashing

    • Breaches of directors’ duties

    • Violation of corporate due diligence laws

  • Finally, NGFS advise that climate-related litigation will increase and likely expand beyond climate change to biodiversity loss.

Climate-related legal claims have already been brought against companies.



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