Skip to content
Shore News Network
  • NJ
    • Jersey Shore News
    • South Jersey News
    • Philadelphia News
    • North Jersey News
    • Ocean County News
    • Monmouth County News
    • Cape May County News
    • Atlantic County News
    • Burlington County News
    • Mercer County News
    • Toms River News
    • Jackson Township News
    • Regional
  • NY
    • New York City News
  • MD
  • PA
  • DE
  • Topics
    • Crime
      • Most Wanted
      • Fire
    • Weird
    • Politics
    • Weather
    • OMG!
    • Traffic
    • Lottery Results
    • Pets
    • US News
    • Politics
    • Weather Reports
    • Weird and Strange News
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Pets
    • Business News
    • Tech and Gaming
    • Entertainment
    • Food
    • Health and Wellness
    • Travel
    • Schools
    • Sports
    • Top 10 Lists
    • Viral News
    • The Buzz
    • Satire
  • US and World News

Montana judge hands historic win to young plaintiffs in climate change case

  • Reuters
  • August 15, 2023
  • 12:02 am
Montana judge hands historic win to young plaintiffs in climate change case

By Clark Mindock

(Reuters) – Montana is violating the rights of young people with policies that prohibit the state from considering climate change effects when it reviews coal mining, natural gas extraction and other fossil fuel projects, a state judge said Monday.

The decision by Judge Kathy Seeley in Helena marked a major victory in the first youth-led climate case to reach trial in the U.S. and could influence similar cases nationwide.

In her ruling, Seeley said Montana’s greenhouse gas emissions have been proven to be “a substantial factor” in causing climate impacts to Montana’s environment, harming the young plaintiffs.

The 16 plaintiffs sued Montana in 2020, when they were ages 2 to 18, claiming the state’s permitting of projects like coal and natural gas production exacerbated the climate crisis, despite a 1972 amendment to the Montana constitution requiring the state to protect and improve the environment.

Seeley said the plaintiffs have a “fundamental constitutional right to a clean and healthful environment.” She said policies that prohibit state agencies from considering climate and emissions impacts when approving fossil fuel projects are unconstitutional.

▪  Harford County Sheriff Backs ICE Partnership Program During Visit With House Judiciary Chairman

In a June trial, the youths had argued that despite its sparse population, Montana is responsible for an outsized share of global emissions. The state is a major producer of coal, oil and gas that is shipped elsewhere and is also the home of pipelines and other infrastructure needed to ship those fuels.

Several of the young plaintiffs took the stand during the trial and detailed how climate change affected their lives.

Lead plaintiff Rikki Held, 22, testified that droughts have left “skinny cows and dead cattle” on her family’s ranch in eastern Montana and wildfires have made ash fall from the sky.

▪  Harford County Sheriff Backs ICE Partnership Program During Visit With House Judiciary Chairman

The state argued that climate policy should not be set by courts and the plaintiffs hadn’t proved that the global crisis could be attributed to Montana’s relatively small emissions.

A spokesperson for the Montana attorney general’s office on Monday called the ruling “absurd,” and Seeley an “ideological judge who bent over backward to allow the case to move forward.” The state plans on appealing, the spokesperson said.

Julia Olson, an attorney for Our Children’s Trust, which represented the young people, called the decision a “huge win for Montana” and said similar decisions were likely to follow in different states.

Michael Gerrard, director of the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School, said Seeley’s findings, including that climate change is a serious health and environmental threat, could “become an inspiration” for lawsuits in states with similar constitutional provisions and make it more difficult for defendants to wave away climate concerns.

▪  NJ Lawmaker Warns of “Progressive Fatigue,” Blasts Democratic Leadership

It is “the strongest decision on climate change ever issued by any court,” he said.

The case was one of several youth-led climate cases in the U.S. A case by young people in Hawaii against the state’s Department of Transportation is scheduled to go to trial next year, making it the second in the country to do so. A case against the U.S. government was revived in June after being dismissed by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2020.

(Reporting by Clark Mindock, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Cynthia Osterman)

tagreuters.com2023binary_LYNXMPEJ7D0OD-BASEIMAGE

Related News

Women targeted in terrifying armed robbery in Pasadena

Heartbroken shelter dog Frankie still waiting months for someone to meet him

NJ Federal Court Denies Inmate’s Request to Pause Civil Rights Lawsuit Over Shooting Case

  • US and World News
  • About
  • Contact
  • TOS
  • Privacy Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Adsense TOS
  • FTC Disclosure
  • Our Team
  • About
  • Contact
  • TOS
  • Privacy Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Adsense TOS
  • FTC Disclosure
  • Our Team

Copyright © 2026 Shore News Network – All Rights Reserved

  • Shore Media & Marketing LLC
  • news@shorenewsnetwork.com