Current:Home > NewsCoastal Communities Sue 37 Oil, Gas and Coal Companies Over Climate Change -Dynamic Wealth Solutions
Coastal Communities Sue 37 Oil, Gas and Coal Companies Over Climate Change
View
Date:2025-04-17 06:09:48
Two California counties and a city are suing 37 fossil fuel companies, accusing them of knowingly emitting dangerous greenhouse gases that have contributed to global warming that threatens their communities with sea level rise.
It won’t be an easy case to make, legal experts say, but it’s drawing the interest of private attorneys who see enough potential to take it on.
Marin and San Mateo counties, near San Francisco, and the city of Imperial Beach, south of San Diego, filed the new lawsuits in California Superior Court on Monday against Exxon, Shell and 35 other oil, gas and coal companies.
Their lawsuits accuse the companies of having known, for nearly five decades, “that greenhouse gas pollution from their fossil fuel products had a significant impact on the Earth’s climate and sea levels.” They say the companies’ “awareness of the negative implications of their behavior corresponds” with rising greenhouse gas emissions. Together, the lawsuits say, the companies were responsible for roughly 20 percent of total emissions from 1965 to 2015.
The lawsuits contend that the companies “concealed the dangers, sought to undermine public support for greenhouse gas regulation, and engaged in massive campaigns to promote the ever-increasing use of their products at ever greater volumes.”
The municipalities argue that the companies’ actions amounted to negligence and a public nuisance—and they also contend that the companies failed to warn the public about dangers of their products, among other allegations.
The main trade group representing the oil and gas industries, the American Petroleum Institute, and representatives for Exxon and Shell did not respond on Tuesday to messages seeking comment on the lawsuits.
Claiming “Failure to Warn” and “Design Defect”
The lawsuits are not the first to pursue companies for their greenhouse gas emissions, but they present new twists.
“The public nuisance claims have been made before, though they never reached a resolution,” said Michael Burger, executive director of the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University.
“What’s different here is the ‘failure to warn’ and ‘design defect’ claims—they have not been made in regard to climate change yet—and these are claims that rely on a long history of the industry’s knowledge and allegedly deceptive activities,” he said.
While those types of claims are similar to ones made against the tobacco industry, they could be harder to prove.
“There are a number of significant legal hurdles,” Burger said. “They have to show causation.”
“It’s easy enough to say these companies pulled fossil fuel out of the ground,” Burger said. “Proving that these particular emissions that came from these fossil fuel companies led to this particular level of sea level rise and contribute X amount to harms that have happened or will happen—that’s a long chain of causation.”
“At the end of the day, it’s a difficult, but not impossible legal case,” Burger added.
Seeing the Impact of Climate Change
The two counties and city say they’re already seeing the financial impacts of sea level rise, and they expect to continue to see damage to public spaces and infrastructure—including wastewater treatment facilities, roads and beaches—and be forced to spend millions to find ways to adapt to it.
“Sea level rise is harming Imperial Beach and threatening our future,” the city’s mayor, Serge Dedina, said in a statement. “As a low-income coastal community, we have no capacity to pay for the adaptation measures needed to protect ourselves from these impacts. It is unfair to force citizens, business owners and taxpayers to fend for ourselves when the source of the problem is so clear.”
The municipalities are not seeking specific damages and instead are leaving that decision to the courts.
Latest Legal Challenge for Fossil Fuel Industry
The lawsuits add to the legal challenges against some of the fossil fuel majors.
Notably, the attorneys general of Massachusetts and New York have been investigating Exxon over what it told investors about the impacts of fossil fuels on the climate. Those investigations followed two separate investigative series in 2015, first by InsideClimate News and then the Columbia University School of Journalism and Los Angeles Times, into the cutting-edge research on climate change conducted by Exxon as far back as the 1970s and later industry efforts to cast doubt on the science and to delay efforts to cut emissions.
Historically, most of the challenges have been helmed by government attorneys, either for states or municipalities. The lawsuits filed Monday were submitted by private attorneys representing the municipalities rather than government lawyers.
“These are tort lawyers working on this, and that’s different from when you’re looking at state AG’s or municipalities using in-house staff,” Burger said. “What that means is that at least some tort lawyers see this as a potential winner because they’re taking their time and they see an opportunity to win a big case.”
veryGood! (16563)
Related
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Donald Trump ordered to pay The New York Times and its reporters nearly $400,000 in legal fees
- Beverly Johnson reflects on historic Vogue magazine cover 50 years later: I'm so proud
- Emma Stone applies to be on regular 'Jeopardy!' every year: 'I want to earn my stripes'
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- The US struggles to sway Israel on its treatment of Palestinians. Why Netanyahu is unlikely to yield
- DOJ seeks death penalty for man charged in racist mass shooting at grocery store in Buffalo
- Mississippi Supreme Court won’t hear appeal from death row inmate convicted in 2008 killing
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- NFL playoff games ranked by watchability: Which wild-card matchups are best?
Ranking
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Patriots hire Jerod Mayo as coach one day after split with Bill Belichick
- More drone deliveries, new AI tech: Here's a guide to what Walmart unveiled at CES 2024
- Khloe Kardashian Shares Why She Doesn’t “Badmouth” Ex Tristan Thompson
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Google layoffs 2024: Hundreds of employees on hardware, engineering teams lose jobs
- Spain forward Jenni Hermoso says former coach Jorge Vilda made players feel uncomfortable
- Fox News stops running MyPillow commercials in a payment dispute with election denier Mike Lindell
Recommendation
Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
Mass shooting at Buffalo supermarket now Justice Department’s first death penalty case under Garland
Former US Sen. Herb Kohl remembered for his love of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Bucks
Mayday call from burning cargo ship in New Jersey prompted doomed rescue effort for 2 firefighters
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Why This Is Selena Gomez’s Favorite Taylor Swift Song
Lights, cameras, Clark: Iowa’s superstar guard gets prime-time spotlight Saturday on Fox
A healing Psalm: After car wreck took 3 kids, surrogacy allowed her to become a mom again.