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Graduate research is currently one of the most inefficiently used tools/multiplers in the struggle to combat climate change. Funding for energy and climate-related research is low and emissions reduction materials have been slow to make their way into graduate curriculum. Imagine students at each of the more than 4,000 universities in the U.S. working on for-credit climate projects each semester. Assuming one student per school, students could generate nearly 700,000 hours of research and volunteer work per year and gain interdisciplinary climate problem-solving skills and contacts in the process. MODEL CLIMATE PROJECTS
Click here to e-mail the NAELS Executive Director for more information. Please include your name, affiliation, and a brief description of your research project or climate interest. General
Student Activism: Lessons from the Past
What's
the Problem: Law, Policy, Economics, & Science of Climate Change?
What
are the Current Policy Solutions?
How
Can Students Play a Role?
Changing
the School as an Economic Actor & Investor
Environmental
Justice & Climate Change
THE BASICS
International Law & Policy
U.S. Law & Policy Climate Litigation
& Potential Research Projects (compiled by Peter
Grabiel)
Friends of the Earth, Inc. et al. v. Watson et al.,
3:02cv4106 filed August 27, 2002 in the United States District Court
for the Northern District of California (San Francisco). Germanwatch and BUND (The German section of Friends
of the Earth) v. The German Federal Ministry of Economics and Labour,
Filed June 15, 2004 in the Administrative Court in Berlin. Australian NGOs v. Minister of Planning, in Melbourne Australia. Summary: A collection of NGOs challenged (and won) a federal minister's power to prevent a planning body from considering greenhouse GHG emissions before deciding on the approval a coal mine expansion. Commonwealth of Massachusetts, et al., Petitioners,
v. United States Environmental Protection Agency, Respondent, Case No.
03-1361 (consolidated with Nos. 03-1362 through 03-1368), (Filed in
the D.C. Circuit, Oct. 23, 2003). Summary: NGOs (NRDC & Earth Justice among them), states, cities and territories filed a petition for review of final action of the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) adopting the legal opinion that the EPA had no authority to regulate GHG emissions under the CAA. The EPA also made a final decision denying a petition for rulemaking regarding automobile fuel efficiency standards. The first briefs were filed on June 22, 2004. Petitioners want to force EPA to regulate CO2 under the CAA. Oral arguments are scheduled for April 8, 2005. State of Connecticut, et al., v. American Electric
Power Company, Inc., et al., 04cv05669 & 04cv5670 (LAP) (DFE) ECF
Case (consolidated) filed in United States District Court for the Southern
District of New York (New York). Summary: The AGs from 8 states brought a public nuisance suit against the 5 largest electric utilities companies in the United States. A similar suit filed by local conservation organizations from the North East, represented by the NRDC, has been consolidated with the case. The 5 utilities are the top 5 domestic emitters of carbon dioxide representing roughly 10% of U.S. emissions and 2% of emissions globally. The plaintiffs seek damages based on the effects of climate change caused the emissions of CO2. The utilities have filed a motion for summary judgment and the plaintiffs have filed their reply. The court has yet to decide the motion. INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW & HUMAN RIGHTS Inuit Circumpolar Conference v. United States of America, in the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), Not Filed. Summary: The Inuit Circumpolar Conference (ICC) which represents over 150,000 indigenous persons from Russia, Alaska, and Canada is considering suing the United States in the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) "seeking a declaration that the impacts in the Arctic of human-induced climate change infringes upon the environmental, subsistence, and other human rights of the Inuit." The ICC claims that by refusing to ratify the Kyoto Protocol and curtail their greenhouse gas emissions, the United States, the world's largest greenhouse gas emitter, has violated the Inuit's human rights, including their right to property, culture, and subsistence. The case will invoke the 1948 American Declaration on the Rights and Duties of Man. The claim will be filed later this year by the Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL) attorney Donald Goldberg. POTENTIAL LITIGATION & RESEARCH TOPICS
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