It is high time now that people start suing for adapatation measures instead of suing for damages for their own benefits.Climate Change is real and people suffer its effects in their daily lives.People loose life and properties.
Who is responsible for it? who is to take steps ,when and how? This German Watch press realease is giving a true and sound argument rose by peruvian farmer.
Young lawyers Foundation supports such claims against largest polluters towards safety for climate change victims.
The Palcacocha lake, above the city of Huaraz, dams the glacial melts bout could flood due to ice avalanches. The drainage system in place is not sufficient to secure the lake. Photograph: GermanWatch
Melting glaciers: Peruvian requests German utility RWE
to pay for protective measures
It is the
first time in Europe that one of the world’s largest polluters is prompted to
pay for the safety of a climate change victim. Glacial melting in the Andes
threatens Saúl Luciano Lliuya and his hometown. The case may be brought before
a German court.
Berlin/Huaraz
(16 March, 2015). A person affected by climate change has made the
unprecedented move to launch a claim against a European carbon major, demanding
that the company contribute to urgently needed protective measures: Peruvian
citizen Saúl Luciano Lliuya, with the help of the renowned environmental lawyer
Dr. Roda Verheyen (Hamburg), demands payment for safety works from German
utility RWE. Mr Luciano Lliuya’s property as well as large parts of his
hometown Huaraz are prone to a so-called glacial lake outburst flood from Lake
Palcacocha located upstream from the city. Germanwatch, a German environmental
and development organisation, supports Mr Luciano Lliuya’s move against RWE
upon his request. If the company’s response to his claim proves unsatisfactory,
Mr Luciano Lliuya plans to sue RWE in a German court.
“This move is unparalleled in Europe”, says Christoph
Bals, Policy Director of Germanwatch. “The fast-growing risks of glacial
melting in this region clearly bear the signature of climate change. Saúl
Luciano Lliuya is refusing to be merely a victim and is taking control of his
own destiny“. According to a 2013 study, RWE is Europe’s single largest emitter
of greenhouse gases. According to a 2014 report, the utility’s contribution to
total global emissions since industrialisation is about half a percent.
Accordingly, Saúl Luciano Lliuya demands that RWE covers 0.5 percent of the
costs associated with the implementation of protective measures for Huaraz.
Glacial lake outburst
flood threatens the city of Huaraz / IPCC: glacial melting in the Andes is
caused by climate change
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IPCC
finds that glacial retreat and melting of the tropical Andean glaciers is
attributed to climate change. Glacial lake outburst floods are a growing threat
in Huaraz, a small town of fifty-five thousand people, at the foot of the
Peruvian Andes. Over a six-year span, a glacial lake located upstream has grown
four-fold due to glacial melting. The increase in global temperatures is also
associated with glacial pockets breaking, which may cause the lake to overflow.
A resulting flood could quickly assume disastrous proportions and cause
devastating damage in populated areas. In 1941, thousands fell victim to a
flood when an earthquake caused chunks of ice to collapse into this lake – at that
time the lake was much smaller than it is today. Since then the risk has
dramatically increased, due to climate change. The latest flood was recorded in
2003. Authorities say that there is an acute risk of flooding; they have
repeatedly declared a state of emergency. At present, there is no early warning
system running, not even a provisional one, which recently stopped working. The
safety workers operating the system, a mere radio station, have not been paid
since mid-2014. Due to the system breakdown they were forced to lay down their
work.
To effectively avert the risk of flooding, glacial lake
Palcacocha would need to be drained until further safety works can be
implemented, such as building new dams and modernising the existing ones. For
the purpose of undertaking these measures, Saúl Luciano Lliuya asks the utility
to contribute around 20.000 Euro – this amount accounts for around 0.5 percent
of the projected total costs and is equivalent to RWE’s share in global
historic emissions.
Christoph Bals: “We support this claim. Those who harm
others have to be held accountable for their actions. Thus, Germanwatch expects
RWE to develop and implement a new business model so as to avoid causing
further damages. In addition, the company has to pay its fair share of
financing measures to protect those at risk. If the ‘polluter pays’ principle
is not implemented in a market economy, profits are privatised while risks are
socialised. Companies that create risks or cause damage to others through their
business activity have to shoulder their responsibility and act accordingly.”
It should not be a permanent solution that those affected by climate change,
often the poorest and most deprived, have to pursue their individual claims for
protection and enforce them against the polluters. “There is an increasing
number of people whose very existence is threatened by climate change even
though they have not contributed to it. We need a political solution to end
this scandal, one that obliges the polluters to take responsibility. In the
run-up to the Paris climate summit, a new climate agreement could bring new momentum
towards this direction”, says Christoph Bals.
About
Germanwatch
Germanwatch, based in Bonn and Berlin (Germany), is an
independent non-profit organisation engaged for sustainable global development.
Finding ways how the most vulnerable people worldwide will be able to deal with
the consequences of climate change is one major focus of
the organisation's work. In 2004 Germanwatch drew attention to the risks of
Glacial Lake Outburst Floods for the first time. The publication, based on
scientific publications, was internationally noted.