
After a landmark decision in favor of teenage climate change campaigners, shouts of victory flooded the air in Montana. A federal judge decided that Montana’s fossil fuel projects violated a climate-friendly constitutional provision.
Judge Kathy Seeley of the Lewis and Clark County District Court issued the first-of-its-kind judgment, declaring that Montana’s fossil fuel projects violated part of the law. “The state and each person shall maintain and improve a clean and healthy environment in Montana for present and future generations.”
There is no proof that Montana contributed to climate change: Montana’s Attorney General
According to a passage of Judge Seeley’s decision, “Montana’s (greenhouse gas) emissions and climate change have been proven to be a substantial factor in causing climate impacts to Montana’s environment and harm and injury to the youth plaintiffs.” Montana justice officials are not pleased with the decision. According to a statement from the Attorney General’s Office, the verdict will be appealed.
Montana, according to state officials, cannot be held liable for climate change. In a statement, Emily Flower, a spokesperson for Montana’s Attorney General, stated that there was no proof that Montana contributed to climate change. “Even the plaintiffs’ expert witnesses agreed that our state has no impact on the global climate,” she said.
Still speaking on the subject, Emily Flower reminded reporters that numerous such cases have been dismissed in various jurisdictions. She was perplexed as to why Montana would become the exception. Climate change issues have taken on political significance in recent years. Mrs. Flower believes that political ideology impacted the decision. “They found an ideological judge who bent over backward to allow the case to move forward and earn herself a spot in their next documentary,” she said.
To make the decision, the judge had to declare a component of the Montana Environmental Policy Act (MEPA) unconstitutional. This measure, which legalized Montana’s fossil fuel projects, appeared to contradict the previously noted pro-climate provision on which the judgment was based.
The activists, who ranged in age from 5 to 22, testified to the visible consequences of climate change
It was a wonderful triumph for the environment on the part of the young climate campaigners. They filed the lawsuit in 2020 with the assistance of the Western Environmental Law Center and the non-profit Our Children’s Trust.
The activists, who ranged in age from 5 to 22, testified to the visible consequences of climate change in their communities. These negative consequences included respiratory issues caused by wildfire smoke and Native Americans’ inability to access traditional food sources.
20-year-old Olivia Vesovich, who gave her testimony in the trial, said, “It feels like it’s suffocating me, like if I’m outside for minutes,” talking about the bad air. “Climate change is wreaking so much havoc on our world right now, and I know that will only get worse.”
The victory will serve as an inspiration for other campaigners who may have given up on the seemingly hopeless legal battle for environmental protection. As more young people join the burgeoning environmental preservation movement, we may expect a slew of similar lawsuits to emerge across the country in the near future.
More victories like this would be devastating to efforts to expand power plants, coal mines, and other fossil fuel infrastructure across the country.