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There is increasing evidence to suggest that adaptation to the inevitable is
as relevant to climate change policymaking as mitigation efforts. Both
mitigation and adaptation, as well as the unavoidable damage occurring both
now and that is predicted to occur, all involve costs at the expense of
diverse climate change victims. The allocation of responsibilities—implicit in
terms of the burden-sharing mechanisms that currently exist in public and
private governance—demands recourse under liability law, especially as it has
become clear that most companies will only start reducing emissions if
verifiable costs of the economic consequences of climate change, including the
likelihood of liability, outweigh the costs of taking precautionary measures.
This vitally important book asks: Can the precautionary principle make
uncertainty judiciable in the context of liability for the consequences of
climate change, and, if so, to what extent? Drawing on the full range of
pertinent existing literature and case law, the author examines the
precautionary principle both in terms of its content and application and in
the context of liability law. She analyses the indirect means offered by
existing legislation being used by environmental groups and affected
individuals before the courts to challenge both companies and regulators as
responsible agents of climate change damage. In the process of responding to
its fundamental question, the analysis explores such further questions as the
following:
;
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What is the role of the precautionary principle in resolving uncertainty in
scientific risk assessment when faced with inconclusive evidence, and how does
it affect decision-making, particularly in the regulatory choices concerning
climate change? To this end, what is the concrete content of the precautionary
principle?
;
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How does liability law generally handle scientific uncertainty? What different
types of liability exist, and how are they equipped to handle a climate change
liability claim?
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What type of liability is best suited for precautionary measures or a lack
thereof? Can the application of the precautionary principle make a difference
to the outcomes of climate change liability claims?
In order to draw conclusions concerning the legal uncertainties posed by
climate change, the author draws examples from national legislations
representative of the various legal systems, as well as from existing
treaties. General rules and obligations relevant to climate change liability
are examined, and a selection of actual legal cases from around the world
concerning climate change, be it actual liability claims or litigation
indirectly relevant to a claim, is also presented. As an overview of the
different legal challenges created by climate change liability, this book is
without peer. The practical meaning and impact of these findings for lawyers
(whether corporate or activist), for regulators and policymakers, and for
decision-makers in governmental bodies and private companies is immeasurable.
About the Author. Preface. Acknowledgments. List of Abbreviations.
Introduction: A Novel Legal Perspective on a Meteorological Phenomenon
Chapter 1 Climate Change and Uncertainty: Defining the Framework Setting
of a Global Problem Chapter 2 The Precautionary Principle as a Measure
to Handle Uncertainty Chapter 3 Establishing the Conditions of
Liability Law in the Face of Climate Change Uncertainties Chapter 4 The
Precautionary Principle and Climate Change Liability Conclusion: An
Inconvenient Deliberation. Bibliography Table of Cases. Index.