HomeMedia Requests>News>For fossil-fuel emitting governments, climate action should start at home: Steve Lorteau (SJD) for The Conversation
For fossil-fuel emitting governments, climate action should start at home: Steve Lorteau (SJD) for The Conversation
Wednesday, April 19, 2023
For fossil-fuel emitting governments, climate action should start at home
One hundred twenty-five of the world’s richest billionaires emit roughly three million tonnes of CO2 per year. (AP Photo/Martin Meissner, file)Steve Lorteau (SJD doctoral candidate), University of Toronto
Many assume that big publicly traded oil companies and private individuals are primarily responsible for climate change. And there is some truth to this assumption.
Governments have responded to the problem of private emissions through a variety of policies. However, what is often overlooked is that governments own some major emitters themselves.
State-caused pollution is often neglected
Numerous state-owned energy companies and utilities rank among the world’s biggest polluters.
State-caused pollution can also result from unexpected sources. Military operations, for example, are responsible for one to five per cent of global emissions. For reference, the aviation and shipping industries roughly account for two per cent of global emissions each.
State-caused pollution is different
State-caused pollution presents both a problem and an opportunity.
State-caused pollution is inconsistent with the principles of international climate change law. As the International Court of Justice has confirmed, governments are required to prevent transboundary environmental harm resulting from the activities under their “jurisdiction and control,” which includes state entities.
“States should … refrain from unlawfully polluting air, water and soil, e.g. through industrial waste from State-owned facilities.”
These norms suggest that states should do more to lower their emissions.
At the same time, state-caused pollution is easier to control through the political process. In contrast to privately-owned companies, state-owned polluters are directly accountable to government officials.
This implies that their activities are primarily shaped by political priorities, as opposed to the overriding goal of profit maximization. This distinction opens interesting avenues for climate change action, provided governments make it a priority to reduce their emissions.
Addressing state-caused pollution
State emission sources can be controlled in two ways.
First, voters can urge governments to speed up the transition to cleaner energy through state-owned enterprises. Starting in 2003, the Ontario government closed five state-owned coal-fired power plants. The closures slashed coal’s share of the province’s electricity generation mix to zero per cent from roughly 25 per cent.
Since 2003, the Ontario Government has closed five state-owned coal-fired power plants.
Second, national and international courts can hold state-owned polluters accountable for environmental harms. There is an emerging trend of climate change claims against state-owned polluters, or so-called “state-as-polluter” litigation.
In the Ogoniland case, the African Commission on Human Rights found the Nigerian government responsible for human rights violations resulting from the polluting activities of its government-owned oil company.
Similarly, an Ecuadorian court recently found the country liable for constitutional violations resulting from gas flaring
In Belgium and the United Kingdom, climate activists have launched lawsuits against government financial institutions for their investments in the fossil fuel industry. This trend of “state-as-polluter” will likely continue in the future.
State-owned companies can also make major investments in renewable energy sources and research and development. This will allow state-owned companies to play a decisive role in the clean energy transition.