Berliner Boersenzeitung - German court to rule on Peruvian farmer's climate fight

EUR -
AED 4.223505
AFN 80.316194
ALL 98.699178
AMD 440.687199
ANG 2.057895
AOA 1054.42877
ARS 1358.563238
AUD 1.764576
AWG 2.072637
AZN 2.004567
BAM 1.96676
BBD 2.322443
BDT 140.56334
BGN 1.957991
BHD 0.433507
BIF 3424.424272
BMD 1.149868
BND 1.479633
BOB 7.948225
BRL 6.365722
BSD 1.15021
BTN 98.4156
BWP 15.398681
BYN 3.764245
BYR 22537.413832
BZD 2.310486
CAD 1.570456
CDF 3308.170627
CHF 0.942421
CLF 0.028081
CLP 1077.598542
CNY 8.264734
CNH 8.273559
COP 4820.281373
CRC 584.359092
CUC 1.149868
CUP 30.471503
CVE 110.88439
CZK 24.77
DJF 204.354329
DKK 7.459343
DOP 67.858164
DZD 150.824867
EGP 56.924907
ERN 17.248021
ETB 156.966588
FJD 2.579962
FKP 0.851311
GBP 0.847832
GEL 3.139206
GGP 0.851311
GHS 11.847924
GIP 0.851311
GMD 81.063364
GNF 9966.672879
GTQ 8.83926
GYD 241.322759
HKD 9.025924
HNL 30.015271
HRK 7.53555
HTG 150.85067
HUF 399.728417
IDR 18684.435961
ILS 4.033248
IMP 0.851311
INR 98.240589
IQD 1506.797168
IRR 48438.191745
ISK 143.606701
JEP 0.851311
JMD 183.935044
JOD 0.815229
JPY 166.046732
KES 148.559685
KGS 100.5555
KHR 4615.682407
KMF 496.170121
KPW 1034.881044
KRW 1573.260598
KWD 0.351825
KYD 0.958533
KZT 585.829651
LAK 24827.142253
LBP 103061.249535
LKR 343.830137
LRD 230.050036
LSL 20.472189
LTL 3.395261
LVL 0.695544
LYD 6.285026
MAD 10.495418
MDL 19.835367
MGA 5208.983631
MKD 61.556577
MMK 2413.801946
MNT 4106.458471
MOP 9.29884
MRU 45.479451
MUR 52.295894
MVR 17.713711
MWK 1994.497709
MXN 21.730672
MYR 4.872564
MZN 73.534504
NAD 20.472189
NGN 1775.430393
NIO 42.325876
NOK 11.572159
NPR 157.463785
NZD 1.903471
OMR 0.442125
PAB 1.1502
PEN 4.174866
PGK 4.731429
PHP 64.192559
PKR 324.82425
PLN 4.248937
PYG 9178.148529
QAR 4.195179
RON 5.024697
RSD 117.227933
RUB 91.415748
RWF 1632.081165
SAR 4.312762
SBD 9.598398
SCR 16.674621
SDG 690.528441
SEK 10.980027
SGD 1.476361
SHP 0.903616
SLE 25.411825
SLL 24112.158376
SOS 657.357645
SRD 42.941249
STD 23799.947115
SVC 10.065223
SYP 14950.520235
SZL 20.46268
THB 37.494918
TJS 11.502401
TMT 4.036037
TND 2.266964
TOP 2.693103
TRY 44.964094
TTD 7.807544
TWD 34.332775
TZS 3006.904563
UAH 47.746306
UGX 4124.987977
USD 1.149868
UYU 47.656203
UZS 14578.433732
VES 114.494317
VND 29931.06541
VUV 138.115126
WST 3.031683
XAF 659.627273
XAG 0.031792
XAU 0.000345
XCD 3.107576
XDR 0.822609
XOF 659.641695
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.820343
ZAR 20.323015
ZMK 10350.18661
ZMW 28.497565
ZWL 370.257044
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

German court to rule on Peruvian farmer's climate fight
German court to rule on Peruvian farmer's climate fight / Photo: Luka GONZALES - AFP

German court to rule on Peruvian farmer's climate fight

A court will rule Wednesday on whether a Peruvian farmer's fight against a German energy giant can proceed, a judgement his lawyers hope will have far-reaching consequences for climate justice.

Text size:

Saul Luciano Lliuya argues that electricity producer RWE must pay towards the cost of protecting his hometown, Huaraz, from a swollen glacier lake that is at risk of overflowing from melting snow and ice.

RWE has never operated in Peru, but the 44-year-old farmer has argued that, as one of the world's top emitters of carbon dioxide, the German firm is partly responsible for the flood risk faced by his town, nestled in the mountains in central Peru.

RWE has argued that it has complied with emissions regulations and that individual emitters should not be held legally responsible for the general effects of climate change.

The civil case brought by the farmer against the energy giant is being heard by a court in the western German city of Hamm, which in March held hearings over whether Lliuya's property was at substantial risk of damage.

On Wednesday, the court will rule on this issue. If it rules that the property is at risk, the lawsuit will then proceed to the issue of whether RWE can be held liable.

If the court rules on Wednesday that Lliuya's property is not at risk, the lawsuit is unlikely to proceed further.

Lliuya's lawyer Roda Verheyen said that she expected the court to confirm the principle that a company can be held responsible for the effects of its planet-heating emissions.

"In my view, we cannot lose," she said in a briefing before the verdict.

She said she was hoping that the court's ruling would set a precedent that "under German law a case like this is possible", even if this particular case could not move forward.

Such a ruling would be a "massive step forward", added Noah Walker-Crawford, a researcher advising Lliuya's legal team.

"This would send a very important message to courts around the world."

- 10-year legal fight -

Lliuya first filed a lawsuit in 2015 at a court in the western city of Essen, where RWE has its headquarters, demanding 17,000 euros ($18,400) towards flood defences for his community.

The Essen court dismissed the case, but in 2017 the higher district court in nearby Hamm allowed an appeal.

Lliuya bases his claim on a study that concluded that RWE, which today uses a variety of power sources including wind, coal and gas, has been responsible for 0.38 percent of all global carbon emissions since the start of the industrial era.

Court-appointed expert Rolf Katzenbach told the tribunal in March that there was about a one percent chance of the lake flooding Lliuya's property at some point in the next 30 years, having earlier put it at three percent.

Lukas Arenson, an expert called for Lliuya, said Katzenbach's estimates relied too much on historical trends and did not adequately factor in the effects of future climate change.

Lliuya's legal team later unsuccessfully applied for Katzenbach's evidence to be struck off on the grounds that he had business dealings with an RWE subsidiary, RWE Nuclear, while appointed to the Lliuya case.

A spokesman for RWE said the company believed that effects of climate change could not be legally attributed to individual emitters: "Otherwise, anyone could sue anyone for climate change."

"The company has complied with all legal regulations relating to CO2 emissions at all times in the course of its business activities," the spokesman added.

(F.Schuster--BBZ)