Friday, 2 July 2021

French court orders government to act on climate in next nine months.

Extract from The Guardian

Council of State says it will assess state’s actions after 31 March 2022, and could issue substantial fines.

The French Council of State in Paris, with EU and French flags

Greenpeace France said the Council of State’s ruling was ‘a clear ultimatum issued in the face of the government’s inaction over climate change’.

Europe correspondent

Last modified on Fri 2 Jul 2021 04.40 AEST

France’s top administrative court has ordered the government to take “all necessary additional steps” within the next nine months to enable it to reach its climate crisis targets or face possible sanctions, including substantial fines.

The Council of State said in a final ruling published on Thursday, with no possibility for appeal by the government, that France was not on track to meet its goal of achieving a 40% cut in emissions from 1990 levels by 2030.

“The Council of State therefore instructs the government to take additional measures between now and 31 March 2022 to hit the target,” it said.

A spokesperson said it would assess the state’s actions after the deadline, which falls days before the first round of presidential polls in which Emmanuel Macron is expected to seek re-election, and could issue a fine if it considered it necessary.

“This ruling by the Council of State is historic: for the first time in France, the state has been ordered to act for the climate,” said Damien CarĂªme, an MEP and former mayor of the northern coastal town of Grande-Synthe, which brought the case.

“I hope this will bring an end to the lethargy, hypocrisy and cynicism ... Behind the government’s fancy speeches, there is a lack of action and ambition which is putting our joint futures in danger.”

Environmental activists protest in Paris

A former environment minister, Corinne Lepage, who represented the town, also hailed the ruling as “historic”, while a campaign group including Oxfam France and Greenpeace France said the “noose is tightening on the government”.

Greenpeace France hailed what it called “a clear ultimatum issued in the face of the government’s inaction over climate change”. The rate of decline in greenhouse gas emissions in France between 2015 and 2018 was about half as fast as needed to meet its 2030 target.

Macron has been criticised for failing to meet France’s Paris agreement targets on the climate, with the independent High Council on Climate repeatedly warning the government was falling short of its commitments.

In November 2020 the Council of State ruled that France’s climate goals were binding, subsequently giving the government an extra three months to prove its climate policies would allow the country to meet its goals.

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