The plaintiffs awaiting the start of the trial in June Getty Images North America
Young people鈥檚 constitutional right in Montana to a 鈥渃lean and healthful environment鈥 was protected in a landmark decision Monday.
A court ruled that the state鈥檚 environmental policies have failed to protect children from climate change. The ruling pushes against a new Montana state law 鈥 the Montana Environmental Policy Act 鈥 that prohibits considering the climate impact of future energy projects, including those involving fossil fuels and mining.
鈥淏y prohibiting analysis of [greenhouse gas] emissions and corresponding impacts to the climate鈥 the [Montana Environmental Policy Act] Limitation violates Youth Plaintiffs鈥 right to a clean and healthful environment and is unconstitutional on its face,鈥 wrote District Judge Kathy Seeley, who ruled in favour of the plaintiffs.
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In trial hearings in June, scientists detailed how greenhouse gas emissions imperil the health and livelihoods of those growing up in Montana. The group of 16 young plaintiffs, aged between 5 and 22 years old, recounted the changes they were seeing in their communities due to climate change. In a poem read to the court, a 15-year-old boy with severe asthma described himself as 鈥渁 prisoner in my own home鈥 after covid-19 and wildfire smoke trapped him indoors.
The landmark decision is a rare victory in a country that has seen similar cases fail in recent years. Climate activists are optimistic that the win could bolster the already-growing number of youth-led climate movements, especially in states that enshrine such rights in their constitutions.
鈥淎s fires rage in the West, fuelled by fossil fuel pollution, today鈥檚 ruling in Montana is a game-changer that marks a turning point in this generation鈥檚 efforts to save the planet from the devastating effects of human-caused climate chaos,鈥 wrote Julia Olson at the nonprofit law firm Our Children鈥檚 Trust, which represented the young activists. 鈥淢ore rulings like this will certainly come.鈥
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