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Thursday, June 28, 2012
Youth Get Day in Continued Fight for Climate Change Protection
Government's failure to act is endangering the well-being of future generations
Contact: Samantha Ruscavage-Barz (505) 819-5923
Additional Contact: Julia
Olson, 415-786-4825, julia@ourchildrenstrust.org
Santa Fe, NM – On June 29, New Mexico youth and WildEarth
Guardians will return to New Mexico First Judicial District Court for the
second time to defend their right to a healthy earth and sustainable future.
They hope that Judge Sarah Singleton will rule in their favor and allow the
case to go forward in what experts have called one of the most remarkable legal
actions that has the potential to halt human-induced climate change.
On May 4, 2011, 16-year-old Akilah Sanders-Reed
and WildEarth Guardians filed a lawsuit against Governor Martinez and the State
of New Mexico, No. D-101-CV-2011-1514,
to compel the State to prevent further increases in carbon dioxide (CO2)
emissions and to compel government action in reducing CO2 emissions.
Akilah’s and WildEarth Guardians’ drive in entering the lawsuit comes from the
alarming research of our nation’s top scientists. According to leading climate
scientist Dr. James Hansen, “the science is crystal clear—we must rapidly
reduce fossil fuel carbon dioxide emissions if we are to have a chance of
protecting Earth’s natural systems for these young people.”
The lawsuit is based on the Public Trust
Doctrine, which requires sovereign governments to manage and protect vital
natural resources for the common benefit of its citizens. By evoking this
doctrine, the plaintiffs are not asking for monetary or punitive damages. They
are instead petitioning the court to require that the State of New Mexico fulfill
its obligation to protect the climate from excessive greenhouse gas emissions,
which will ultimately protect New Mexico’s resources for future
generations.
There is evidence that New Mexico is
particularly vulnerable to climate change and must develop and implement an
informed plan to protect the State’s public trust resources. In its Statement of Reasons for
adopting Greenhouse Gas Cap and Trade Provisions issued on November 10, 2010,
the New Mexico Environmental Improvement Board (EIB) acknowledged that
“[c]limate change caused by anthropogenic emissions of GHGs will have a particularly
severe impact o[n] the American Southwest, including New Mexico. The warming
trends in this region are double the annual global average.”
In spite
of the EIB’s finding that New Mexico is imminently threatened by climate change
impacts resulting from GHG emissions, this past spring the EIB repealed all of
New Mexico’s regulations for controlling GHG emissions, leaving New Mexico’s
atmosphere completely unprotected from unlimited GHG emissions and the
resulting climate impacts.
According to Samantha Ruscavage-Barz, attorney for
the plaintiffs, “our State has an obligation to all of its citizens, and our
youth in particular, to ensure the protection of natural resources that the
State holds in trust for the security and livelihood of those citizens. Yet the
State continues to brazenly ignore this obligation in favor of commercial
exploitation of our natural resources, particularly when it comes to the
atmosphere.”
In July of last year, the State of New Mexico
and Governor Martinez filed a motion to dismiss the case despite the plaintiffs’
formidable scientific and legal claims. On January 25, 2012, Akilah and
WildEarth Guardians went to court for the first time to defend their right to
hold New Mexico and the Governor accountable for failing to protect the climate
from New Mexico’s excessive greenhouse gas emissions. The State and Governor
raised jurisdictional defenses in an attempt to prevent the court from hearing
the substance of the case. Judge Singleton gave plaintiffs leave to amend their
complaint to more clearly articulate the remedies plaintiffs were seeking from
the court. After plaintiffs filed their amended complaint in April, the State
and Governor Martinez again moved to dismiss the new complaint on the basis of
the same jurisdictional defenses. Judge Singleton will again consider these
same arguments and decide whether to give New Mexico youth a chance to state
their case on the merits and move one step closer to a real climate recovery
plan.
To protect Earth’s natural systems and our way
of life, the consensus among scientists is that average global surface heating
must not exceed 1°C and CO2 concentrations must decline to less than
350 parts per million this century (we are currently over 390 ppm). To accomplish
this reduction, Dr. James Hansen and other renowned scientists conclude that
carbon dioxide emissions need to peak in 2012 and decline by 6% per year
starting in 2013.
If this is not accomplished, the predicted
human-induced impacts of climate change in New Mexico are severe. In a recent report by the U.S.
Department of the Interior, the Bureau of Reclamation predicted a temperature increase of
5-6°F for the Upper Rio Grande
Basin in the 21st century, accompanied by a decrease in precipitation. Consequences of increased temperatures
include decreased snow pack, decreased water availability for agriculture, and
reduced habitat for riverine species. Hotter temperatures coupled with
decreased precipitation will pose challenges to human health and increase the
risk of wildfires, which threaten the State’s forests, ecosystems, and rural
populations.
Plaintiff Akilah Sanders-Reed says, "I'm
17. I can’t vote. But I can hike and backpack. I can listen to birdsong, and
admire the Rio Grande running between the cottonwoods. I can savor local
produce. I can hear the rustle of leaves and sunlight filters through them, and
breathe fresh air. I can experience how inherently beautiful our world is, but
I am politically powerless to save it. In order for my generation to have a
future, we have to trust our government officials to protect that future. It
seems, though, that this trust was misplaced, so I'm raising my voice in the
one branch of government where it can be heard."
The New Mexico lawsuit is part of a larger,
innovative climate litigation strategy—the international iMatter Trust Campaign. As part of this
campaign, youth plaintiffs launched Public Trust legal actions in 49 states and
the District of Columbia, in addition to a federal lawsuit.
- Dr.
Hansen’s recent paper is available at: http://ourchildrenstrust.org/sites/default/files/Hansen
et al..pdf
- Additional
information about New Mexico can be found here: http://ourchildrenstrust.org/node/75
- About
the Partners:
Our
Children's Trust is a nonprofit focused on
protecting earth’s natural systems for current and future generations. We are
here to empower and support youth as they stand up for their lawful
inheritance: a healthy planet. We are mothers, fathers, grandparents, aunts,
uncles, teachers. We are adults, part of the ruling generation, and we care
about the future of our children--and their children's children. www.ourchildrenstrust.org/
iMatter
Campaign is a youth-led campaign of
the nonprofit group, Kids vs Global Warming, that is focused on mobilizing and
empowering youth to lead the way to a sustainable and just world. We are teens
and moms and young activists committed to raising the voices of the youngest
generation to issue a wake-up call to live, lead and govern as if our future
matters. www.imattercampaign.org/
WildEarth Guardians is
a nonprofit environmental conservation and advocacy organization based in Santa
Fe, New Mexico. Guardians works
to replace fossil fuels with clean, renewable energy in order to safeguard
public health, the environment, and the Earth’s climate for future generations.
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