Submitted:
14 August 2025
Posted:
15 August 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Constitutionalisation
2.1. Prevailing Legal Yardsticks
2.2. Incrementalism, Entrenchment, and Countertendencies
3. Countering Governance Failures with Human Rights, International Law and Science
3.1. Human Rights
3.2. International (Climate) Law
3.3. Normative Effects of Science
4. Climate Constitutionalisation in Europe
4.1. Replicability
4.2. Countertendencies in a Multilayered Judicial Context
5. Multilayered Constitutionalisation
5.1. The European Court of Human Rights: KlimaSeniorinnen and beyond
5.2. The Advisory Opinion on of the International Court of Justice
6. Justifying Constitutionalisation
7. Conclusions
References
- ‘Europe’ denotes the geographical area where national law, European Union law, and the ECHR are applicable in partially overlapping but not identical layers of law. In other words, it covers the EU and its Member States but also as a matter of principle the Contracting Parties to the ECHR, with the disclaimer that any remarks about EU law are not applicable.
- Comparative data taken from: Higham C, Setzer J and Bradeen E (2022) Challenging government responses to climate change through framework litigation. London: Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment and Centre for Climate Change, available at: Challenging-government-responses-to-climate-change-through-framework-litigation-final.pdf, Joana Setzer & Catherine Higham, Global trends in climate change litigation: 2025 snapshot (Policy report, LSE 2025), p. 29-30; available at: Global trends in climate change litigation: 2025 snapshot - Grantham Research Institute on climate change and the environment, and Sabin Center’s Climate Litigation Database on global litigation: https://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case-category/other/.
- See the prevalence of European cases in the relevant section on general emission reduction cases against states: Setzer & Higham, ibid, p 29-30: all cases cited by name are from Europe, except the South Korean Youth case. The four example of cases with the greatest legal impact are all from Europe (p.29). Successful: Rechtbank Den Haag [Court of First Instances The Hague], 24 juni 2015, AB 2015/336 (Urgenda, First Instance); Hof Den Haag [Court of Appeals The Hague], 9 October 2018, JB 2019/10 (Urgenda, Court of Appeal); State of the Netherlands v Stichting Urgenda [2019] ECLI:NL:HR:2019:2007 (Urgenda, Supreme Court); Supreme Court of Ireland. Friends of the Irish Environment v. Ireland, Appeal No. 205/19; Neubauer and Others v Germany [2021] 1 BvR 2656/18, 1 BvR 96/20, 1 BvR 78/20, 1 BvR 288/20, 1 BvR 96/20, 1 BvR 78/20 (Neubauer); L’Affaire du Siècle, Tribunal Administratif de Paris, Nos. 1904967, 1904968, 1904972, 1904976/4-1 (Oct. 14, 2021); Conseil d’État [Council of State]. Commune de Grande-Synthe v. France, Case No. 467982; VZW Klimaatzaak v Kingdom of Belgium & Others [2021] 2015/4585/A (Klimaatzaak, Court of First Instance). Cour d’Appel Bruxelles [Court of Appeals Brussels] (2nd ch.), Nov. 30, 2023, J.L.M.B. 24/045 (Belgium) (Klimaatzaak, Court of Appeal); Court of Appeal (England and Wales). R (Friends of the Earth Ltd) v. Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, Claim Nos. CO/125/2022, CO/163/2022, CO/199/2022 (Net Zero Strategy); ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz et al. v Switzerland, no. 53600/20, ruling of 9 April 2024.
- Also called ‘systemic cases’ (Lucy Maxwell, Sarah Mead and Dennis van Berkel, ‘Standards for adjudicating the next generation of Urgenda-style climate cases’ (2022) 13 (42) Journal for Human Rights and the Environment) and ‘framework cases’ (Joana Setzer & Cathrine Higham, Global trends in climate change litigation: 2022 snapshot (Policy report, LSE 2023), available at: https://www.lse.ac.uk/granthaminstitute/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/Global-trends-in-climate-change-litigation-2022-snapshot.pdf, accessed 11 July 2024).
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3; International Court of Justice (ICJ), Obligations of States in Respect of Climate Change, Advisory Opinion of 23 July 2025 (ICJ, AO).
- Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, available at: https://climatecasechart.com/non-us-climate-change-litigation/ (accessed on 30 April 2025).
- See n. 3 for 8 successful cases and Section 4.2 for 12 unsuccessful cases.
- UNEP, Emissions Gap Report 2023: Broken Record – Temperatures hit new highs, yet world fails to cut emissions (again), EGR2023.pdf (https://unep.org); Climate Action Tracker, Analysis for 2022, https://climateactiontracker.org; See also UNEP, Emissions Gap Report 2022, https://www.unep.org/resources/emissions-gap-report-2022.
- Petra Dobner and Martin Loughlin, The Twilight of Constitutionalism? (2010); Aoife O’Donoghue, Constitutionalism in Global Constitutionalisation (2014).
- O’Donoghue, ibid, 16.
- Dobner and Loughlin, n. 9, 47.
- Sam Bookman, ‘Demystifying Environmental Constitutionalism’, Environmental Law (2024); James May & Erin Daly, Global Environmental Constitutionalism (2014); Louis Kotze, ‘The Conceptual Contours of Environmental Constitutionalism’ 21 Widener Law Review (2015), 187 – all with further references.
- Stephen Holmes, ‘Precommitment and Paradox of Democracy’, in Jon Elster & Rune Slagstad (eds.) Constitutionalism and Democracy (1988), pp. 196.
- Bookman, n. 12.
- ibid., Introduction.
- ibid.
- ibid.
- David Kennedy, ‘A Semiotics of Legal Argument’ 42 Syracuse Law Review (1991), 75-116, at 101.
- Alon Harel, The Tension between the National and ECHR Human Rights Adjudication: A Normative Account 24 Human Rights Law Review (2024), 1-11, at 5. On the merit of entrenchment by making law-making procedurally harder (many considerations are transferrable to international courts): Nick Barber, ‘Why entrench?’ 14(2) International Journal of Constitutional Law (2016), 325–350.
- Christina Eckes, ‘A Timid Defence of legal formalism’, in Marija Bartl and Jessica Lawrence (eds.), The Politics of European Legal Research (2022) 192-207.
- A prominent example of the latter: US Supreme Court, Medellín v. Texas, 552 U.S. 491 (2008).
- Aileen Kavanagh, The Collaborative Constitution (2023), Chapter 3 ‘The Case for Collaboration’. Art. 13 Wet AB neergelegde verbod van rechtsweigering [prohibition to deny justice]. This is also how ‘duty’ is read in the famous citation: ‘It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is’ form Marbury v Madison [1803] 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137 (1803).
- Roda Verheyen, Wir alle haben ein Recht auf Zukunft (2023), 13; Christina Eckes, ‘Governance failures in court: how litigation constitutionalises norms on climate change mitigation’ in Armin Steinbach & Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann (eds.), Constitutionalism, Transnational Governance Failures and Policy Responses (2024).
- See by contrast: Juliana v US, at: Juliana v. United States - Climate Change Litigation.
- Climate Action Tracker, and UNEP, Emissions Gap Reports 2022 & 2023, n. 8.
- See also beyond Europe: Cesar Rodríguez-Garavito, ‘Human Rights: The Global South’s Route to Climate Litigation’, 114 American Journal of International Law (2020), 40-4; Jon May & Erin Daly, ‘Global climate constitutionalism and justice in the courts’ in: Jordi Jaria-Manzano & Susana Borrás (eds.), Research Handbook on Global Climate Constitutionalism (2019), 235-45. For an approach also concentrating on codified law: Navraj Singh Ghaleigh et al., ‘The Complexities of Comparative Climate Constitutionalism’, 34 Journal of Environmental Law (2022), 517-28; see fundamentally: Louis Kotzé, Global Environmental Constitutionalism in the Anthropocene (2016).
- Urgenda, District Court, n. 3. Chantal Mak discusses Urgenda as a politically sensitive case in civil courts, inter alia through a lens of constitutionalisation: Chantal Mak, ‘Giving voice: a public sphere theory of European private law adjudication’ European Law Open (2023), 697–723.
- Urgenda, Court of Appeal and Supreme Court, n. 3.
- Conclusion of Procurator General in State of the Netherlands (Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Policy) v Stichting Urgenda [2019], ECLI:NL:PHR:2019:887, sections 1.35.
- Article 1382 Belgian Civil Code.
- Klimaatzaak, n. 3.
- Klimaatzaak, Court of Appeal, ibid, para. 234.
- The constitutional complaints of two associations were dismissed as inapplicable.
- Article 20a German Constitution; GFCC, Neubauer, n. 3, 144 et seq.
- Critical voices challenge the very medium of individual rights: Christoph Menke, Kritik der Rechte (2018).
- Amnesty International, After UN Climate Action Summit, Urgent Action Needed by All States to Avoid Human Rights Violations on Massive Scale (Public statement, Index number IOR 40/1239/2019, Amnesty International 2019), available at: www.amnesty.org/en/documents/ior40/1239/2019/en/ accessed on 31 July 2025; UNEP (UN Environment Programme), Climate Change and Human Rights (Report, UNEP 2015), available at: www.unep.org/resources/report/climate-change-and-human-rights accessed on 31 July 2025.
- Nicolas Taconet et al., ‘Influence of climate change impacts and mitigation costs on inequality between countries’ 160(1) Climatic Change (2020), 15-34; S. Cevik & J. Tovar Jalles, For Whom the Bell Tolls: Climate Change and Income Inequality (IMF, 2022); Daniel Lindvall, (2024). Climate change and the endurance of democracy, Chapter 6, https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003465874; World Inequality Lab, Climate Inequality Report 2023, Fair Taxes for a Sustainable Future in the Global South, available at: CBV2023-ClimateInequalityReport-3.pdf (wid.world) accessed on 20 October 2024.
- See for ‘victim status’ within the meaning of Article 34 ECHR: ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, 478-488 and 507-520; See for direct and individual concern within the meaning of Article 263(4) TFEU: Case T-330/18 Carvalho and Others v EP and Council EU:T:2019:324, 33 et seq; upheld on appeal by Case C-565/19 Carvalho v EP and Council EU:C:2021:252, para 76-7. See similarly: Case T-141/19 Peter Sabo v EP and Council ECLI:EU:T:2020:179; C-297/20 P Sabo and Others v EP and Council ECLI:EU:C:2021:24.
- Conclusion of Procurator General in Urgenda, n. 29.
- Neubauer, n. 3 but also below in Section 5.1 KlimaSeniorinnen, see also Eckes, C. (2025). “It’s the democracy, stupid!” in defence of KlimaSeniorinnen. ERA Forum. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12027-025-00828-w.
- See for a synthesis of 166 NDCs representing 193 Parties: UNFCCC, Nationally determined contributions under the Paris Agreement, FCCC/PA/CMA/2022/4 (Synthesis Report, UNFCC 2022), available at: https://unfccc.int/ndc-synthesis-report-2022 (accessed 20 October 2024).
- ICJ, AO, n. 5, para 410; see also below Section 5.2.
- Recitals and Art 3(1) UNFCCC (CBDR-RC) and Article 3(3) UNFCCC (precautionary principle), see Urgenda, n. 4, 5.7.3.
- Urgenda, n. 2, 7.2.2 and 7.2.3.
- Supreme Court, Urgenda, n. 2, 5-12. Conclusion of Procurator General in Urgenda, n. 29, section 1.2 et seq, in particular section 1.2(xxvii), 1.7, 2.19, and 2.30.
- Klimaatzaak, Court of Appeal, n. 3, 8-68.
- Neubauer, n. 3.
- L’Affaire du Siècle and Grande Synthe I, n. 3.
- For a very critical voice on the inclusiveness and legitimacy of the IPCC: Tejal Kanitkar, Akhil Mythri & T. Jayaraman, Equity assessment of global mitigation pathways in the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report, Climate Policy (2024).
- Within the meaning of Articles 4(1), 7(5) and 14(1) Paris Agreement 2015. See ICJ, AO, n. 5, para 278.
- Klimaatzaak, Court of Appeal, n. 3, 17.
- As did L’Affaire du Siècle, n. 3.
- German Advisory Council on the Environment (Sachverständigenrat für Umweltfragen – SRU), see Neubauer, n. 2, 28, 36, 216-47.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, 64-120.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, 431-33.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, 558 et seq.
- See Bookman, n. 12.
- Klimaatzaak, Court of Appeal, n. 3, 192.
- See also: Yann Robiou du Pont & Malte Meinshausen, ‘Warming assessment of the bottom-up Paris Agreement emissions pledges’, Nature Communications (2018), at p. 4810.
- However, Urgenda, n. 3, and Neubauer, n. 3, reason in relation to 2°C and 1.75°C (the temperature in relation to which the national advisory body calculated the remaining budget), respectively. While this is for partially historically explicable reasons, the substantive obligations in these rulings are hence also intrinsically incompatible with 1.5°C.
- Bundesgericht, KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz et al. v Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications [2020] 1C_37/2019, para 5.3.
- Klimaatzaak, Court of Appeal, n. 3, 195 – translated by the author.
- Similar issues are raised by grandfathering, overshoot, and negative emissions, which are inherent in all climate models but the degree of their use needs to be normatively justified.
- Many other cases in Europe also refer to the here discussed cases, e.g., the Irish Climate Case, n. 3; Net Zero Strategy, n. 3.
- See, e.g., for a case outside of Europe: Thomson v. Minister for Climate Change Issues, High Court of New Zealand Wellington Registry (2017); Mathur v. Ontario, Superior Court of Justice of Ontario (2020); Lawyers for Climate Action NZ Incorporated v The Climate Change Commission, High Court of New Zealand (2022); Daniel Billy et al v. Australia, UN Human Rights Committee (2022).
- Milieudefensie et al. v. Royal Dutch Shell, available at: https://climatecasechart.com/non-us-case/milieudefensie-et-al-v-royal-dutch-shell-plc/ (accessed 20 October 2024).
- DHU cases in Berlin-Brandenburg; Barbara Metz et al. v. Wintershall Dea AG; Kaiser et al. v. Volkswagen AG; Deutsche Umwelthilfe v. Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (BMW) and Deutsche Umwelthilfe v. Mercedes-Benz AG https://www.ngfs.net/sites/default/files/medias/documents/ngfs_report-on-climate-related-litigation-recent-trends-and-developments.pdf (accessed 20 October 2024).
- See the complaint by Greenpeace and Germanwatch, available at: https://www.greenpeace.de/publikationen/Verfassungsbeschwerde_final_0.pdf (accessed 20 October 2024).
- Nature and Youth Norway and others v Norway [2020] HR-2020-24720P (Nature and Youth); High Court of Justice (Administrative Court). Plan B Earth v. Prime Minister, Case No. CO/1587/2021 (Plan B); Supreme Administrative Court of the Czech Republic. Klimatická Žaloba ČR and Others v. the Czech Republic, Case No. 9 As 116/2022–166; Bundesgericht, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 61; Supreme Court of Spain, Greenpeace v. Spain, Case No. 002/0000162/2021; Civil Court of Macerata, Italy, A Sud v. Italy, Case No. 39415; Nacka District Court, Aurora and Others v. Sweden, Case No. 7177-23; Supreme Administrative Court of Finland [Korkein hallinto-oikeus]. KHO:2023:62; ECLI:FI:KHO:2023:62 (Finnish Climate Case I); Supreme Administrative Court of Finland [Korkein hallinto-oikeus]. KHO:2025:2; ECLI:FI:KHO:2025:2 (Finnish Climate Case II). See also: ECtHR, Carème v. France, Application No. 7189/21 and Duarte Agostinho, Application No. 39371/20.
- Nature and Youth, ibid. See also: Petra Minnerop & Ida Rostgaard, ‘In Search of a Fair Share: Article 112 Norwegian Constitution, International Law, and an Emerging Inter-Jurisdictional Judicial Discourse in Climate Litigation’, 44 Fordham Int’l LJ (2021), 847-920.
- Nature and Youth, n. 69, 234.
- Ibid, para. 243.
- Ibid, 144.
- Plan B, n. 69, 48-50 & 77.
- Plan B, n. 69, 5.
- Plan B, n. 69, 55-6.
- Eckes, C. Strategic Climate Litigation before National Courts: Can European Union Law be used as a Shield? German Law Journal 2024, 25, 1022–1042. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- See for inspiration: Cristina Lafont, Democracy without shortcuts: A participatory conception of deliberative democracy (2019).
- GC and ECJ, Carvalho, n. 38. See also: Winter, G. (2023) ‘Plaumann withering: Standing before the EU General Court underway from distinctive to substantial concern’, European Journal of Legal Studies, 15(1), 85–123.
- Christina Eckes, ‘KlimaSeniorinnen requires the EU to set a 2040 target of at least 90 % reduction domestically’, European Law Blog, 2025, available at: KlimaSeniorinnen requires the EU to set a 2040 target of at least 90 % reduction domestically · European Law Blog.
- Nick Barber, n. 19.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, para. 571.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, e.g., at 164 (report of the UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights in the context of climate change) and 245-6 (public rapporteur to the Conseil d’État in the Grande Synthe II), 260-1 (submission of the Netherlands).
- Christina Eckes, ‘Mutual Trust and the Future of Fundamental Rights Protection in the EU’s Compound Legal Order’, in Nehal Bhuta (ed.), Human Rights in Transition (2024).
- See for the direct legal weight of the ECHR in a selection of national jurisdictions: Christina Eckes, ‘EU accession to the ECHR: between autonomy and adaption’, 76 Modern Law Review (2023), 254-85.
- It is considered moderate because international customary law has internal effect but does not take precedence over a conflicting rule of Dutch law (Nyugat [1959], HR 6 March 1959, NJ 1962, 2).
- GFCC, Decision of 14 Oct. 2004, 2 BvR 1481/04 – (Görgülü; ECHR decision). See more recently: GFCC, Decision of 4 May 2011, 2 BvR 2365/09; 2 BvR 740/10; 2 BvR 2333/08; 2 BvR 1152/10; 2 BvR 571/10 – (Preventive Detention).
- Christina Eckes, EU accession to the ECHR, n. 85.
- Except for provisions of international agreements that are not binding on everyone (‘eenieder verbindend’), see article 94 of the Dutch Constitution.
- See Douglass Cassel, ‘Does International Human Rights Law Make a Difference’, 2 Chicago Journal of International Law (2001), 121.
- George Letsas, Two Concepts of the Margin of Appreciation 26 Oxford Journal of Legal Studies (2006), at 705, see also 722 (the principle of subsidiarity as ‘a chronological or procedural domestic control over international control’).
- Alon Harel, n. 19, 7-8.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3; Bundesgericht, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 61.
- Rules of the Court, edition of 23 June 2023, Rule 24 – Composition of the Grand Chamber andRule 72 – Relinquishment of Jurisdiction in favour of the Grand Chamber, available at: https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/d/echr/rules_court_eng.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, para. 571 ‘requires the States to act on the basis of equity and in accordance with their own respective capabilities’.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, 519.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, 449, 550.
- KlimaSeniorinnen was decisive for the Swedish court’s interpretation of standing in Aurora, n. 68.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, 498-503; quote at 476.
- Aurora, n. 69.
- Eckes, C., Kammeringer, C., & Coenders, A. (2025). Democratie en vertegenwoordiging van het algemeen belang. Nederlands Juristenblad (NJB).
- Eckes, 2040 target, n. 80.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, 268 (‘overview of domestic case law concerning climate change’).
- ECtHR, Müllner v. Austria App no. 18859/21 (ECtHR, 1 July 2024). At least ten additional climate cases are pending before the ECtHR.
- See on the latter point: Eckes, Shield, n. 77.
- ICJ, AO, n. 5, para 389 and 393.
- Ibid, 372-86.
- Ibid, para 385.
- Ibid, 224 and 189.
- Ibid, 404 and 309-315.
- Ibid, 240 and 247.
- Ibid, para 278 emphasis added.
- Ibid, para 457 (3)(A)(f).
- Ibid, para 72.
- See ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, 421.
- See above all Bookman, n. 12.
- Kathrina Kuh, ‘The Legitimacy of Judicial Climate Engagement’ Ecology Law Quarterly (2019), 731-764.
- See with regard to environmental adjudication: Katalyn Sulyok, Science and Judicial Reasoning (2020).
- Stephen Dover, ‘Sustainability: Demands on Policy’ 16 Journal of Public Policy (1997), 303-18.
- Daniel Lindvall, (2024). Climate change and the endurance of democracy.
- Neubauer, n. 3, 246.
- Daniel Fiorino, Can Democracy Handle Climate Change? (2018); Jason Brennan, Against Democracy (2016); David Shearman, Joseph Wayne Smith, The Climate Change Challenge and the Failure of Democracy (2007).
- ICJ, AO, n. 5, para 227.
- Eyal Benvenisti and Alon Harel, ‘Embracing the Tension Between National and International Human Rights Law: The Case for Discordant Parity’ (2017) 15(1) International Journal of Constitutional Law 36.
- Joana Setzer & Catherine Higham, Global trends in climate change litigation: 2025 snapshot (Policy report, LSE 2025), available at: Global trends in climate change litigation: 2025 snapshot - Grantham Research Institute on climate change and the environment.
- See Giovanni Sartori, ‘Constitutionalism: A Preliminary Discussion’, 56 American Political Science Review, 853, 855.
- ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, 421.
- See e.g., parliamentary question and answers of the cabinet relating to KlimaSeniorinnen, available at: https://www.tweedekamer.nl/kamerstukken/kamervragen/detail?id=2024Z12035&did=2024D34379 (accessed 20 October 2024).
- https://uitspraken.rechtspraak.nl/details?id=ECLI:NL:RBDHA:2024:14834 (accessed 20 October 2024).
- https://expertenrat-klima.de/en/publikationen/ (accessed 20 October 2024).
- See the complaint by Greenpeace and Germanwatch, n. 117, as well as the background paper of the complaint by the Solarenergie-Fördervereins Deutschland e.V. (SFV) and Bund für Umwelt und Naturschutz Deutschland e.V. (BUND), available at: https://www.bund.net/fileadmin/user_upload_bund/publikationen/klimawandel/klimaschutz-menschenrecht-klima-verfassungsbeschwerde-bund-sfv.pdf (accessed 20 October 2024).
- The Court referred the implementation to the Council of Ministers: ECtHR, KlimaSeniorinnen, n. 3, 657. See for the process: Committee of Ministers, ‘1521st Meeting (DH), 4–6 March 2025, H46-30 Verein KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz and Others v Switzerland (Application No 53600/20)’ (Council of Europe, 6 March 2025).
- See: https://cadmus.eui.eu/bitstream/handle/1814/77257/Verf_From_Urgenda_2023.pdf (accessed 31 July 2025).
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