The EU has extensive competence to mitigate the climate crisis. It has adopted a wide array of climate laws, setting targets, establishing expert bodies, implementing its political objectives, and obliging Member States to take climate action. However, despite the EU’s climate activities, most cases of strategic climate litigation in Europe have been brought to national courts, challenging national climate targets and policies. This is the case – among other things – because bringing (strategic climate) litigation to the EU courts is very difficult: procedurally, very restrictive standing requirements limit the possibilities for direct actions against general acts. Preliminary requests are procedurally depending on the national judge and cannot offer a novel engagement with the facts. Actions for failure to act require a positive obligation of the EU institutions to succeed. Substantively, the EU courts have also shown great deference towards the EU institutions when it comes to reviewing decisions relating to technical and scientific information.
At the same time, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) routinely refers not only to the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights (EUCFR), but also to the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and the Strasbourg Court’s case law. This raises the question of whether the recent decisions of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) – above all, in KlimaSeniorinnen – may themselves create opportunities to make the ECJ change its established positions? And, if so, how?
This workshop brings together academics and practitioners to identify and creatively think about legal opportunity structures in EU law. We take the above-mentioned well-known obstacles as a starting point and open a conversation about what may work under EU law and before the ECJ. The panels are structured around four procedural avenues to the court, which all can be used for bringing very different claims and construing very different cases. The objective is to identify and creatively think about new opportunity structures to bring cases to Luxembourg that could lead to more effective climate policies in Europe.
09:00 – 09:15 Introduction, Christina Eckes, UvA
09:15 – 09:45 Overview of climate cases before the CJEU, Nina Koistinen, University Eastern Finland
09:45 – 10:00 coffee break
10:00 – 11:30 Panel 1: Legislative Acts In this panel, we discuss direct actions, requests for internal review (RIRs), and preliminary (validity) references as alternative routes to challenge legislative acts.
Alberto Nicotina (UvA, chair), Ana Bobic (Référendaire at the Court of Justice EU), Loes van Dijk (Climate Court), Stefano Romoli (Legal Service, EC), Sebastian Bechtel (ClientEarth) and Climate Litigation Network.
11:30 – 11:45 coffee break
11:45 – 13:15 Panel 2: Non-Legislative Acts In this panel, we discuss direct actions, requests for internal review (RIRs), and preliminary (validity) references as alternative routes to challenge non-legislative acts.
Christina Eckes (chair), Gerry Liston (GLAN), Daniel Sarmiento (Universidad Complutense of Madrid), Climate Litigation Network, Sebastian Bechtel (ClientEarth), Reclame Fossielvrij.
13:15 – 14:00 lunch break
14:00 – 15:30 Panel 3: Actions for failure to act and Damages In this panel, we discuss different avenues and strategies to challenge an omission/failure to act (adequately) and remedy harm/seek damages.
Piet Eeckhout (UCL, chair), Clara Mathis (Lille University), Mar Campins Eritja (Barcelona University), Sebastian Bechtel (ClientEarth); Nathan Cambien (Antwerp University)
15:30 – 15:45 coffee break
15:45-17:15 Panel 4: Challenging National Actions Before the ECJ In this panel, we discuss different opportunities arising from relying on national courts to make references to the ECJ that help to advance a climate agenda in the national context.
Joana Setzer (LSE, chair), Clemens Kaupa (VU), Annalisa Savaresi (University of Eastern Finland), Reclame Fossielvrij
17:15-17:30 Closing remarks. Christina Eckes, Alberto Nicòtina
This event is organised with the support of the RED-SPINEL Project and the Strategic Climate Litigation project.