Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Scientists ‘put the sun in a bottle’ with liquid batteries that store solar energy

    May 15, 2026

    Estrogen levels may influence the brain’s response to psychedelics, new animal study shows

    May 15, 2026

    Study: PSA test likely reduces risk of death from prostate cancer

    May 15, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Health Magazine
    • Home
    • Environmental Health
    • Health Technology
    • Medical Research
    • Mental Health
    • Nutrition Science
    • Pharma
    • Public Health
    • Discover
      • Daily Health Tips
      • Financial Health & Stability
      • Holistic Health & Wellness
      • Mental Health
      • Nutrition & Dietary Trends
      • Professional & Personal Growth
    • Our Mission
    Health Magazine
    Home » News » Fossil fuel companies finally accept the climate crisis – just not their role in it | Greenhouse gas emissions
    Environmental Health

    Fossil fuel companies finally accept the climate crisis – just not their role in it | Greenhouse gas emissions

    healthadminBy healthadminMarch 26, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
    Fossil fuel companies finally accept the climate crisis – just not their role in it | Greenhouse gas emissions
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Reddit Telegram Pinterest Email


    While the U.S. government continues to call climate change a hoax and attack the science, in courtrooms from The Hague to Honolulu, fossil fuel companies are taking a different approach. Shell, Chevron, RWE and Total Energy all acknowledge that climate change is real, man-made and serious. The days of denying the corporate environment, at least in legal proceedings, are almost over.

    What has been replaced is a more nuanced position that accepts the science of climate change while contesting responsibility for it.

    A new study published in the journal Transnational Environmental Law provides the first systematic analysis of how major fossil fuel companies defend themselves when brought to court over their role in causing global warming. The study identifies three different strategies companies are using, based on case documents from landmark cases.

    The first and most widespread argument is that climate change is a collective problem caused by society’s energy needs, not by the companies that supply it. In separate lawsuits on different continents, Chevron and Shell cited the same passage from the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report, which says greenhouse gas emissions are caused by “population size, economic activity, lifestyle, and energy use,” and argued that responsibility lies with modern industrial society as a whole.

    German energy giant RWE offered a similar defense in a lawsuit brought by a Peruvian farmer and mountain guide who claimed the company’s emissions contributed to the retreat of glaciers threatening his homeland. RWE’s lawyers told the court that the company’s emissions were generated “in the public interest of ensuring a reliable supply of energy.”

    RWE’s lawyers argued that because CO2 molecules are “indistinguishable from each other,” it is legally impossible to trace the effects of specific emissions to specific harms. Photo: Angela Ponce/Reuters

    Shell, which was sued by Dutch environmental groups seeking to cut emissions by 45% by 2030, argued in its appeal that the energy transition was the responsibility of governments, not individual companies.

    This framework reframes fossil fuel production as a passive response to demand rather than something that poses harm, and positions the political process, rather than courts, as the appropriate forum to address climate change.

    The second strategy is more technical. Companies don’t dispute that the climate is warming or that human activity is to blame. But they dispute whether there is a clear legal causal link between the emissions and the science.

    In the RWE lawsuit, the lawyers challenged a peer-reviewed Nature Geoscience study that attributed flood risk in Peru’s glacial lakes to anthropogenic warming, arguing that rather than denying climate change, glacier models contain fundamental uncertainties and that CO2 molecules are “indistinguishable from each other,” making it legally impossible to trace specific emissions and specific harms.

    In Italy, where Greenpeace and citizen groups sued the energy company Eni over emissions, Greenpeace’s defenders identified attribution – the field of science that shows how climate change has affected extreme weather events – as an early non-standard area. This pattern is consistent across jurisdictions, with companies claiming that climate science helps them understand global warming, but the basis for establishing who bears specific legal responsibility remains controversial.

    A third strategy involves questioning the credibility of those presenting science. In the RWE case, the company’s lawyers submitted printouts of tweets from prominent climate scientist Friederike Otto, noting that she described climate change litigation as “interesting” and arguing that she was too bigoted to serve as a court-appointed expert. When the plaintiffs presented an independent attribution study by researchers in Oxford and Washington, their lawyers attacked the lead authors’ social media posts and professional associations, arguing that connections between the scientists constituted evidence of a coordinated network.

    In the United States, defendants in a lawsuit brought by Multnomah County, Oregon, against ExxonMobil and other oil companies are attempting to attack peer-reviewed evidence, alleging undisclosed relationships between the plaintiffs’ lawyers and the study authors.

    The same pattern holds true in courts around the world. Fossil fuel companies are now accepting the science but rejecting responsibility. The central battleground in climate change litigation will no longer be whether climate change is occurring, but who is legally and financially responsible for it.

    Noah Walker-Crawford He is a research fellow at Imperial College London and the London School of Economics and the author of Save the Climate but Don’t Belame Us: Corporate Arguments in Climate Litigation, published in Transnational Environmental Law.



    Source link

    Visited 6 times, 1 visit(s) today
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleA surprising start to healthcare reform: DC diagnosis
    Next Article Outspoken ACIP member resigns amid vaccine committee uncertainty: Reports
    healthadmin

    Related Posts

    NC regulators have chosen not to set numerical limits for chemical contamination of waterways. why?

    May 14, 2026

    Challenges facing North Carolina oyster farmers range from disease to drought

    May 14, 2026

    New York’s plastics law advances amid debate over ‘chemical recycling’

    May 14, 2026

    How hot will the 2026 World Cup be? Is it dangerous for players and fans? | 2026 World Cup

    May 14, 2026

    New Mexico environmental officials and U.S. Air Force agree on PFAS cleanup plan around cannons • Source New Mexico

    May 13, 2026

    Some lawmakers are targeting big oil companies as property/casualty insurance crisis worsens • Stateline

    May 13, 2026
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Categories

    • Daily Health Tips
    • Discover
    • Environmental Health
    • Exercise & Fitness
    • Featured
    • Featured Videos
    • Financial Health & Stability
    • Fitness
    • Fitness Updates
    • Health
    • Health Technology
    • Healthy Aging
    • Healthy Living
    • Holistic Healing
    • Holistic Health & Wellness
    • Medical Research
    • Medical Research & Insights
    • Mental Health
    • Mental Wellness
    • Natural Remedies
    • New Workouts
    • Nutrition
    • Nutrition & Dietary Trends
    • Nutrition & Superfoods
    • Nutrition Science
    • Pharma
    • Preventive Healthcare
    • Professional & Personal Growth
    • Public Health
    • Public Health & Awareness
    • Selected
    • Sleep & Recovery
    • Top Programs
    • Weight Management
    • Workouts
    Popular Posts
    • 1773313737_bacteria_-_Sebastian_Kaulitzki_46826fb7971649bfaca04a9b4cef3309-620x480.jpgHow Sino Biological ProPure™ redefines ultra-low… March 12, 2026
    • the-pros-and-cons-of-paleo-dietsThe Pros and Cons of Paleo Diets: What Science Really Says April 16, 2025
    • pexels-david-bartus-442116The food industry needs to act now to cut greenhouse… January 2, 2022
    • 1773729862_TagImage-3347-458389964760995353448-620x480.jpgDespite safety concerns, parents underestimate the… March 17, 2026
    • Improve Mental Health10 Science-Backed Practices to Improve Mental Health… March 11, 2025
    • 1773209206_futuristic_techno_design_on_background_of_supercomputer_data_center_-_Image_-_Timofeev_Vladimir_M1_4.jpegMulti-agent AI systems outperform single models… March 11, 2026

    Demo
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss

    Scientists ‘put the sun in a bottle’ with liquid batteries that store solar energy

    By healthadminMay 15, 2026

    One major challenge remains with renewable energy, as solar panels lose their ability to generate…

    Estrogen levels may influence the brain’s response to psychedelics, new animal study shows

    May 15, 2026

    Study: PSA test likely reduces risk of death from prostate cancer

    May 15, 2026

    Musicians show a small but steady advantage in sustained attention from childhood to adulthood

    May 14, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    HealthxMagazine
    HealthxMagazine

    At HealthX Magazine, we are dedicated to empowering entrepreneurs, doctors, chiropractors, healthcare professionals, personal trainers, executives, thought leaders, and anyone striving for optimal health.

    Our Picks

    Musicians show a small but steady advantage in sustained attention from childhood to adulthood

    May 14, 2026

    Supreme Court upholds access to mifepristone while litigation continues

    May 14, 2026

    Making instant judgments about dating apps can hurt your sense of worth as a partner.

    May 14, 2026
    New Comments
      Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
      • Home
      • Privacy Policy
      • Our Mission
      © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.