Top court says countries can sue each other for climate damage this is what to expect
Legal experts tell Stuti Mishra a long-awaited International Court of Justice ruling provides a clear blueprint to hold major emitters accountable
Friday 25 July 2025 18:05 BST
The worlds top court has made it easier for governments to be
held legally accountable for failing to tackle the
climate crisis in an a move that experts say will have profound implications for climate-related lawsuits.
In its long-awaited legal opinion requested by small island nations facing existential threats from sea level rise the
International Court of Justice (ICJ) said states have binding obligations to act on climate change under international law, and failing to do so could constitute a "wrongful act".
In an era of climate science denial and at a time when the
United States, one of the worlds biggest polluters, is retreating from climate action under Donald Trump, ICJ judge Yuji Iwasawa called the
climate crisis an urgent and existential threat and said that
greenhouse gas emissions are unequivocally caused by human activities which are not territorially limited.
Sir David King, chair of the Climate Crisis Advisory Group (CCAG) and former UK scientific adviser, called it a moral reckoning, while former
UN human rights chief Mary Robinson called it a turning point.