Five claimants aged 17-31 want their governments to exit the energy charter treaty, which compensates oil and gas firms

Young victims of the climate crisis will on Tuesday launch legal action at Europe’s top human rights court against an energy treaty that protects fossil fuel investors.

Five people, aged between 17 and 31, who have experienced devastating floods, forest fires and hurricanes are bringing a case to the European court of human rights, where they will argue that their governments’ membership of the little-known energy charter treaty (ECT) is a dangerous obstacle to action on the climate crisis. It is the first time that the Strasbourg court will be asked to consider the treaty, a secretive investor court system that enables fossil fuel companies to sue governments for lost profits.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘We like to keep a little mystery’: Britain’s female Freemasons – a photo essay

Photographer Anna Gordon has been granted extraordinary access to the historically secretive…

Ex-Covid tsar urges Donald Trump to tackle Republican vaccine hesitancy

Adm Brett Giroir says Trump’s leadership ‘matters a great deal’ Poll found…

Imagine the culture war the 2012 Olympic opening ceremony would spark now | Charlotte Higgins

Danny Boyle’s extravaganza burnished what was best about the UK, but the…

Labour had Boris Johnson over a barrel, but he could still scrape the bottom of it | John Crace

PMQs was in limbo in the absence of Sue Gray’s report, so…