Berliner Boersenzeitung - Indigenous Australians lose landmark climate court case against government

EUR -
AED 4.231847
AFN 72.006386
ALL 95.775649
AMD 434.856463
ANG 2.061985
AOA 1056.494174
ARS 1607.727961
AUD 1.62593
AWG 2.075256
AZN 1.960902
BAM 1.951921
BBD 2.322903
BDT 141.523639
BGN 1.898286
BHD 0.435009
BIF 3426.405443
BMD 1.15212
BND 1.470297
BOB 7.969403
BRL 6.015915
BSD 1.153318
BTN 106.241154
BWP 15.547505
BYN 3.400157
BYR 22581.555708
BZD 2.31962
CAD 1.569597
CDF 2509.317944
CHF 0.903952
CLF 0.026698
CLP 1047.657656
CNY 7.913857
CNH 7.926795
COP 4265.678916
CRC 543.624278
CUC 1.15212
CUP 30.531185
CVE 110.171467
CZK 24.443615
DJF 204.754659
DKK 7.47211
DOP 70.279431
DZD 151.91282
EGP 60.306922
ERN 17.281803
ETB 180.189883
FJD 2.546764
FKP 0.859588
GBP 0.862685
GEL 3.127981
GGP 0.859588
GHS 12.483212
GIP 0.859588
GMD 84.684731
GNF 10109.854806
GTQ 8.843884
GYD 241.294622
HKD 9.017932
HNL 30.612093
HRK 7.533601
HTG 151.071716
HUF 390.542276
IDR 19480.048159
ILS 3.609258
IMP 0.859588
INR 106.386375
IQD 1509.277448
IRR 1522843.662919
ISK 144.406822
JEP 0.859588
JMD 180.511238
JOD 0.816835
JPY 183.580564
KES 148.856917
KGS 100.753175
KHR 4631.523173
KMF 490.803076
KPW 1036.946415
KRW 1716.612873
KWD 0.353747
KYD 0.961115
KZT 564.523324
LAK 24695.696398
LBP 103172.362698
LKR 358.579781
LRD 211.184685
LSL 18.975841
LTL 3.401911
LVL 0.696906
LYD 7.321753
MAD 10.789573
MDL 20.027717
MGA 4804.341194
MKD 61.632171
MMK 2419.475654
MNT 4113.233943
MOP 9.298005
MRU 46.223406
MUR 52.894234
MVR 17.811978
MWK 2001.232924
MXN 20.525027
MYR 4.524315
MZN 73.625517
NAD 18.975619
NGN 1604.419758
NIO 42.305986
NOK 11.17874
NPR 169.985846
NZD 1.966915
OMR 0.442995
PAB 1.153348
PEN 3.938519
PGK 4.954981
PHP 68.50519
PKR 322.023742
PLN 4.272194
PYG 7467.223887
QAR 4.19498
RON 5.093866
RSD 117.439033
RUB 91.592772
RWF 1680.943356
SAR 4.323362
SBD 9.269017
SCR 17.435641
SDG 692.424099
SEK 10.763567
SGD 1.472899
SHP 0.864389
SLE 28.346054
SLL 24159.383559
SOS 658.435822
SRD 43.050698
STD 23846.561795
STN 24.770584
SVC 10.091855
SYP 127.744021
SZL 18.987071
THB 37.05209
TJS 11.054873
TMT 4.032421
TND 3.368511
TOP 2.774029
TRY 50.824642
TTD 7.826513
TWD 36.705408
TZS 2995.512702
UAH 51.066863
UGX 4317.456634
USD 1.15212
UYU 46.117941
UZS 14004.020407
VES 504.233742
VND 30271.957971
VUV 137.791412
WST 3.127342
XAF 654.653052
XAG 0.013524
XAU 0.000225
XCD 3.113662
XCG 2.078641
XDR 0.813146
XOF 648.064521
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.894318
ZAR 19.322381
ZMK 10370.465189
ZMW 22.404153
ZWL 370.982231
  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.19

    -0.22%

  • BCC

    -2.1700

    69.73

    -3.11%

  • BCE

    -0.1700

    25.72

    -0.66%

  • RIO

    -0.6700

    91.41

    -0.73%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5500

    16.95

    -3.24%

  • NGG

    1.8800

    91.57

    +2.05%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    34.57

    -0.55%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    -0.9650

    54.185

    -1.78%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.1

    -0.22%

  • JRI

    0.1310

    12.981

    +1.01%

  • VOD

    -0.1050

    14.295

    -0.73%

  • BTI

    0.7050

    59.865

    +1.18%

  • BP

    0.5850

    42.145

    +1.39%

  • AZN

    -1.8600

    191.45

    -0.97%

Indigenous Australians lose landmark climate court case against government
Indigenous Australians lose landmark climate court case against government / Photo: TALEI ELU - GRATA FUND/AFP

Indigenous Australians lose landmark climate court case against government

Indigenous Australians living on a string of climate-threatened islands on Tuesday lost a landmark court bid to hold the government responsible for lacklustre emissions targets.

Text size:

Scattered through the warm waters off Australia's northernmost tip, the sparsely populated Torres Strait Islands are threatened by seas rising much faster than the global average.

Torres Strait elders have spent the past four years fighting through the courts to prove the government failed to protect them through meaningful climate action.

Australia's Federal Court found the government was not obliged to shield the Torres Strait Islands from climate change.

"I thought that the decision would be in our favour, and I'm in shock," said Torres Strait Islander Paul Kabai, who helped to bring the case.

"What do any of us say to our families now?"

Fellow plaintiff Pabai Pabai said: "My heart is broken for my family and my community."

Federal Court Justice Michael Wigney criticised the government for setting emissions targets between 2015 and 2021 that failed to consider the "best available science".

But these targets would have had little impact on global temperature rise, he found.

"Any additional greenhouse gases that might have been released by Australia as a result of low emissions targets would have caused no more than an almost immeasurable increase in global average temperatures," Wigney said.

Australia's previous conservative government sought to cut emissions by around 26 percent before 2030.

The incumbent left-leaning government in 2022 adopted new plans to slash emissions by 40 percent before the end of the decade, and reach net zero by 2050.

- 'Climate refugees' -

Fewer than 5,000 people live in the Torres Strait, a collection of about 274 mud islands and coral cays wedged between Australia's mainland and Papua New Guinea.

Lawyers for traditional land owners from Boigu and Saibai -- among the worst-impacted islands -- asked the court to order the government "to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to a level that will prevent Torres Strait Islanders from becoming climate refugees".

Sea levels in some parts of the archipelago are rising almost three times faster than the global average, according to official figures.

Rising tides have washed away graves, eaten through huge chunks of exposed coastline, and poisoned once-fertile soils with salt.

The lawsuit argued some islands would soon become uninhabitable if global temperatures rose more than 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

The World Meteorological Organization has warned this threshold could be breached before the end of the decade.

While Australia's emissions pale in comparison to the likes of China and the United States, the fossil fuel powerhouse is one of the largest coal exporters in the world.

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)