Showing posts with label looking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label looking. Show all posts

08 January, 2019

A Surge of Climate Lawsuits Targets Human Rights, Damage from Fossil Fuels

A climate denier is in the White House, pushing policies that will boost emissions. Congress is doing nothing to stop him. So citizens and local governments who are facing the impacts of rising seas, worsening heat waves and extreme weather are increasingly looking to the courts for help.
Rhode Island in 2018 became the first state to sue
the fossil fuel industry over climate change, citing the
growing risks from sea level rise and extreme weather.
The past year saw a surge in new lawsuits filed against fossil fuel companies, and major developments in cases pressing governments for action in the United States and abroad. And while the plaintiffs haven't secured any substantial victories in U.S. courts, they may be scoring a different victory by drawing attention to the inaction of Congress and the Executive Branch, said Michael Gerrard, faculty director at the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School.

"Lawsuits, even if unsuccessful, can help shape public opinion," he said. "Mr. Scopes lost the monkey trial, but it led to a lot more awareness about the issue of teaching evolution.”


Read the Inside Climate News story by Nicholas Kusnetz - “A Surge of Climate Lawsuits Targets Human Rights, Damage from Fossil Fuels.”

16 October, 2017

Clean Energy Target: There's nothing in the ACCC report that suggests it should be axed

If the Government is looking for an excuse to ditch the Clean Energy Target, it will struggle to find one in the preliminary report of the competition watchdog's electricity pricing inquiry.

ACCC report disproves the widespread misconception
that renewable energy is responsible for Australia's
higher energy prices.
And if you hear anyone saying the Australian Competition and Consumer Competition (ACCC) report provides backing for such a move, don't buy it — it's spin.

The ACCC has, in fact, given the lie to the widespread misconception that incentives for renewable energy are the main reason Australians are paying far more for electricity than they used to.

Retail prices have risen by almost two-thirds over the course of a decade, but the report confirms that subsidies for renewables have made a very minor contribution to that huge rise.