ENERGY NEWS
Japan youth sue utilities over climate impact
Japan youth sue utilities over climate impact
by AFP Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 18, 2024
A group of 16 Japanese young people is suing utility firms over their carbon emissions, in the latest case worldwide of activists using courts to press for action on climate change.

The plaintiffs, all in their teens and 20s, say it is the first such case brought by young people in Japan, which advocates say has the dirtiest energy mix among G7 nations.

The lawsuit was filed in August against 10 operators of power plants burning fossil fuels whose emissions are incompatible with Japan's climate commitments, their lawyers said.

The first hearing is set for October 24.

The aim of the suit is to protect the young "from the dangerous and negative impacts of climate change" which is a "violation of their human rights and those of future generations", the lawyers said in a statement.

The defendants' self-imposed 2030 emission reduction targets are "extremely inadequate" and rely on "technically unproven technologies" like burning coal mixed with ammonia or storing carbon dioxide underground, they added.

Contacted by AFP, two of the companies named in the lawsuit, JERA and Electric Power Development, declined to comment on an ongoing legal case.

Japan's government is expected to release this fiscal year updated reduction emission targets for the world's fourth-biggest economy through 2035.

Currently around two-thirds of its electricity comes from fossil fuels but it is striving for "carbon neutrality" by 2050 and to cut emissions by 46 percent by 2030 from 2013 levels.

By 2030, Japan wants to almost double the share generated by renewables to 36-38 percent, cut fossil fuels to 41 percent and -- 14 years since the Fukushima disaster -- increase nuclear to 20-22 percent.

South Korea's Constitutional Court ruled in August that much of the country's climate goals were unconstitutional, handing a landmark victory to young environmental activists.

The first such case in Asia, brought by children and teenagers who named an embryo as a lead plaintiff, claimed that South Korea's climate commitments were insufficient and unmet, violating their human rights.

Similar cases have succeeded elsewhere, including in April when the European Court of Human Rights ruled that Switzerland was not doing enough to tackle climate change after a case brought by a group of 2,500 women aged 73 on average.

Related Links

Tweet

ENERGY NEWS
'Age of Electricity' coming as fossil fuels set to peak: IEA
Paris (AFP) Oct 16, 2024
More than half of the world's electricity will be generated by low-emission sources before 2030 but the deployment of clean energy is "far from uniform" across the globe, the International Energy Agency said Wednesday. Demand for oil, gas and coal is still projected to peak by the end of the decade, possibly creating a surplus of fossil fuels, the IEA said in its annual World Energy Outlook. "In energy history, we've witnessed the Age of Coal and the Age of Oil," said IEA Executive Director Fati ... read more

ENERGY NEWS
Entire island of Cuba left without electricity after failure of key power plant

Japan youth sue utilities over climate impact

'Age of Electricity' coming as fossil fuels set to peak: IEA

Climate pact needs 'hundreds of billions' in state money: COP29 hosts

ENERGY NEWS
Seeking new energy solutions from the sea in wave power biofuel and beyond

Efficient Nanobubble Production Method Explored by UCalgary Researchers

Chinese EV battery giant CATL reports jump in profits

Lab data confirm potential of geothermal's holy grail: superdeep, superhot rock as important renewable energy source

ENERGY NEWS
On US coast, wind power foes embrace 'Save the Whales' argument

Renewables revolt in Sardinia, Italy's coal-fired island

Government action needed for world to meet renewables goal: IEA

DLR tests innovative sensor system in wind turbine rotor blades

ENERGY NEWS
Computer simulations offer new insights into enhancing solar cell materials

Streamlined perovskite solar cells offer path to cheaper, more efficient energy

Telescopes could help power isolated communities in Chile's Atacama Desert

UK announces new investment in green energy projects

ENERGY NEWS
Framatome to provide long-term fuel supply for Trillo nuclear plant

Japan shifting back to nuclear to ditch coal, power AI

Zelensky's nuclear arms comments 'dangerous provocation': Putin

Tech giants go nuclear in AI arms race

ENERGY NEWS
Baylor engineers introduce ultra-clean biofuel combustion technology

Innovative catalyst converts CO2 to methane using electricity

Construction of largest research facility for e-fuel production begins in Germany

New process converts plant waste into sustainable jet fuel

ENERGY NEWS
Oil-rich Iraqi Kurdistan votes, shadowed by economic struggles

U.S. stealth bombers strike 'hardened' underground weapons sites in Houthi-run parts of Yemen

Shell pipeline oil leak in Singapore contained

Iowa Supreme Court mulling Summit pipeline lawsuit

ENERGY NEWS
Public money 'must be at core' of new climate pact: UN's Stiell

Draft UN climate pact leaves open thorny question of money

Historic southern Africa drought starving millions: UN

World can't 'waste time' trading climate change blame: COP29 hosts