Dubai Telegraph - Japan govt sued over 'unconstitutional' climate inaction

EUR -
AED 4.311308
AFN 77.879699
ALL 96.688625
AMD 447.85425
ANG 2.101831
AOA 1076.505607
ARS 1707.192072
AUD 1.771749
AWG 2.116032
AZN 2.004043
BAM 1.960029
BBD 2.365855
BDT 143.653019
BGN 1.953335
BHD 0.442548
BIF 3472.941475
BMD 1.173943
BND 1.516572
BOB 8.116825
BRL 6.487208
BSD 1.17466
BTN 105.980932
BWP 15.522957
BYN 3.44641
BYR 23009.283073
BZD 2.362488
CAD 1.61659
CDF 2658.980767
CHF 0.932175
CLF 0.027414
CLP 1075.132381
CNY 8.268374
CNH 8.256711
COP 4552.175346
CRC 585.275311
CUC 1.173943
CUP 31.10949
CVE 110.505791
CZK 24.374112
DJF 209.179364
DKK 7.471085
DOP 73.810833
DZD 152.347317
EGP 55.85943
ERN 17.609145
ETB 182.685082
FJD 2.68158
FKP 0.876785
GBP 0.875256
GEL 3.163731
GGP 0.876785
GHS 13.508665
GIP 0.876785
GMD 86.289333
GNF 10269.376903
GTQ 8.996604
GYD 245.759696
HKD 9.134096
HNL 30.939417
HRK 7.539412
HTG 153.845228
HUF 388.315726
IDR 19601.326503
ILS 3.771187
IMP 0.876785
INR 105.831725
IQD 1538.752932
IRR 49434.739984
ISK 148.256896
JEP 0.876785
JMD 187.949541
JOD 0.832281
JPY 182.512335
KES 151.325623
KGS 102.661551
KHR 4704.150133
KMF 491.882164
KPW 1056.541668
KRW 1729.911202
KWD 0.360331
KYD 0.978812
KZT 606.047668
LAK 25437.862305
LBP 105190.301042
LKR 363.434181
LRD 207.916591
LSL 19.695216
LTL 3.466348
LVL 0.710107
LYD 6.366873
MAD 10.76626
MDL 19.809743
MGA 5282.600749
MKD 61.565611
MMK 2465.347298
MNT 4164.683572
MOP 9.414875
MRU 46.891176
MUR 54.048218
MVR 18.137736
MWK 2036.873034
MXN 21.110661
MYR 4.796681
MZN 75.013881
NAD 19.695216
NGN 1711.831956
NIO 43.224185
NOK 11.945563
NPR 169.565872
NZD 2.030951
OMR 0.451385
PAB 1.17468
PEN 3.955018
PGK 5.063032
PHP 68.760173
PKR 329.125553
PLN 4.206828
PYG 7842.087857
QAR 4.283634
RON 5.091398
RSD 117.391899
RUB 93.919441
RWF 1710.190073
SAR 4.403142
SBD 9.54441
SCR 15.974055
SDG 706.125134
SEK 10.912516
SGD 1.513958
SHP 0.880761
SLE 28.295168
SLL 24617.002332
SOS 670.145972
SRD 45.405775
STD 24298.250206
STN 24.553502
SVC 10.278397
SYP 12981.890755
SZL 19.700508
THB 36.915847
TJS 10.847922
TMT 4.108801
TND 3.433408
TOP 2.826573
TRY 50.16658
TTD 7.970401
TWD 36.996574
TZS 2913.082074
UAH 49.613608
UGX 4196.143368
USD 1.173943
UYU 46.0303
UZS 14165.867329
VES 324.27969
VND 30904.049841
VUV 142.484873
WST 3.269096
XAF 657.375417
XAG 0.017908
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.172639
XCG 2.116968
XDR 0.815819
XOF 657.389447
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.809222
ZAR 19.703518
ZMK 10566.886439
ZMW 26.723686
ZWL 378.009172
  • RBGPF

    -1.7900

    80.22

    -2.23%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.4700

    15.24

    +3.08%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    23.31

    +0.13%

  • RIO

    0.6100

    77.8

    +0.78%

  • NGG

    -0.4720

    76.688

    -0.62%

  • CMSC

    0.1560

    23.416

    +0.67%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    12.91

    +0.77%

  • RELX

    0.4250

    40.985

    +1.04%

  • BTI

    0.2000

    57.37

    +0.35%

  • BCE

    -0.0900

    23.06

    -0.39%

  • BCC

    0.8800

    77.17

    +1.14%

  • GSK

    -0.1300

    48.58

    -0.27%

  • JRI

    0.0130

    13.443

    +0.1%

  • AZN

    0.9050

    90.765

    +1%

  • BP

    -0.6600

    33.81

    -1.95%

Japan govt sued over 'unconstitutional' climate inaction
Japan govt sued over 'unconstitutional' climate inaction / Photo: Kazuhiro NOGI - AFP/File

Japan govt sued over 'unconstitutional' climate inaction

Hundreds of people across Japan sued the central government Thursday seeking damages for "unconstitutional" inaction on climate change, the country's first such litigation.

Text size:

The landmark lawsuit criticises Japan's "grossly inadequate" fight against the climate crisis, saying it jeopardises the health and livelihoods of the approximately 450 plaintiffs.

"We just submitted our complaint and evidence to the court and our lawsuit has been officially accepted," lead lawyer Akihiro Shima told AFP.

Plaintiff Kiichi Akiyama, a construction worker, said that relentless heat forced his team to work slower, causing "huge losses" to his business.

There have also been cases where "people collapse out in the field, or have dropped dead after they return home", the 57-year-old said.

In the past, five climate-related lawsuits have been filed with Japanese courts, including against coal-fired power plants, said Kyoto University assistant professor Masako Ichihara, who has followed such cases in the country.

But Ichihara -- as well as lawyers working on the suit -- say this is the first compensation claim against the state over climate change.

"The defendant's climate change measures are grossly inadequate, and as a result, the plaintiffs' rights to a peaceful life and to the enjoyment of a stable climate are being violated," said the complaint summary, which was obtained by AFP ahead of the filing.

This year, Japan sweltered through its hottest summer since records began in 1898, and the plaintiffs argue such heatwaves cause economic losses, ruin crops and put many at risk of crippling heatstroke.

Akiyama, who frequently works outside in the searing heat, said it now takes his team triple the estimated time to finish their projects.

"I can barely dig with a shovel for 10 minutes without sitting down to rest," he added.

"We wouldn't be in this terrible situation if the government had taken more initiative in implementing policies."

- Burning hot playgrounds -

Similar legal moves are underway globally, including in South Korea where young environmental activists won the first such case in Asia.

Last year, a South Korean court ruled that much of the country's climate goals were unconstitutional. In Germany, climate targets were also ruled insufficient and unconstitutional in 2021.

The suit in Japan is seeking damages of 1,000 yen ($6.5) per plaintiff.

Lead lawyer Shima said plaintiffs wanted to focus on "the issue of the country's responsibility" rather than on money.

Japan's case is bolder than previous lawsuits in the country in that it seeks to directly hold the state accountable for climate inaction, academic Ichihara said.

Chances of a legal win are slim, she explained, but "if the purpose ... is to raise public awareness, then it may succeed because of its "very relatable" messaging.

Another plaintiff, who only gave her surname, Saito, was spurred into action by concerns over her six-year-old son.

She said recent record temperatures were robbing him of opportunities to play outdoors, with public pools sometimes declared off-limits due to heatstroke alerts.

"Not just in pools, but playing outside generally is becoming difficult in summer. The playground equipment is burning hot and that scares me," Saito told AFP.

Thursday's lawsuit criticises Japan's latest emissions target as incompatible with the Paris Agreement's goal of limiting warming to 1.5C from pre-industrial levels.

Japan's nationally determined contributions aspire to cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 60 percent by 2035 and 73 percent by 2040 compared with 2013 levels.

But the targets "fall significantly short" of the global reduction targets outlined in the latest assessment report by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), and they are not legally binding, the complaint summary said.

"This legislative omission is unmistakably unconstitutional."

I.Mansoor--DT