David Victor Quoted On Climate Change Lawsuits
Climate change: Dogs of law are off the leash
01/23/2011
Richard Ingham,
AFP

From being a marginal and even mocked issue, climate-change litigation is fast emerging as a new frontier of law where some believe hundreds of billions of dollars are at stake.
Compensation for losses inflicted by man-made global warming would be jaw-dropping, a payout that would make tobacco and asbestos damages look like pocket money.
Imagine: a country or an individual could get redress for a drought that destroyed farmland, for floods and storms that created an army of refugees, for rising seas that wiped a small island state off the map.
In the past three years, the number of climate-related lawsuits has ballooned, filling the void of political efforts in tackling greenhouse-gas emissions.
Eyeing the money-spinning potential, some major commercial law firms now place climate-change litigation in their Internet shop window.
Click here to read the full article.
Related Links
David Victor is Director of the Laboratory on International Law and Regulation (ILAR). Looking across a wide array of issues from environment and energy to human rights, trade and security, the Laboratory explores when (and why) international laws actually work.
Related Stories
- "Climate change: Dogs of law are off the leash" - Macau Daily Times
- "Did you think global warming alarmism was about saving polar bears?" - The Orange County Register
- "Climate Change Litigation: Can Court Rulings Do What Legislation Cannot?" - MeD India
- "Climate change: Dogs of law are off the leash" - Times of Malta

