From Pakistan to Europe, climate-hit communities take big polluters to court

Farmers transport a heap of crops on a buffalo cart after heavy rainfall in the flood-affected area of Kasur district in Punjab province on August 24, 2025.
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Updated 19 December 2025
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From Pakistan to Europe, climate-hit communities take big polluters to court

  • Experts say advances in climate attribution science are strengthening climate-related lawsuits
  • No company has paid compensation, but recent rulings have made future liability claims possible

PARIS: Farmers and fishermen hit by climate change are taking big corporate polluters to court — and experts say these David-vs-Goliath lawsuits are only set to multiply as the planet keeps warming.

From Pakistan to Belgium and Peru, ordinary people bearing the brunt of failed harvests, rising seas and destructive storms are demanding compensation from the heavy-emitting industries most responsible for the climate crisis.

Once dismissed as legal long shots, climate damage claims are gaining traction, bolstered by scientific advances tying rising greenhouse gas emissions to extreme weather.

While most face steep hurdles, legal scholars say these cases are slowly shifting how courts view responsibility for climate-related economic harm — and who should pay for it.

POLLUTER PAYS

The use of courts and other legal avenues to pursue climate litigation has grown rapidly over the past decade, particularly in the United States.

Most climate lawsuits target governments. For example, on Thursday, hundreds of people across Japan sued the central government over its “grossly inadequate” response to climate change in the country’s first such litigation.

But cases seeking monetary damages from companies with massive carbon footprints — mostly fossil fuel and cement giants — have risen sharply in recent years.

Claimants argue a relatively small number of major polluters bear a historic liability for losses caused by droughts, storms and other climate-fueled extremes.

“Their responsibility dwarfs many even industrialized nation states, let alone other companies or individuals,” Jonathan White, a lawyer at ClientEarth, told AFP.

More than 60 “polluter pays” cases have been filed globally and dozens are ongoing, Zero Carbon Analytics said in March, citing data from Columbia University’s Sabin Center for Climate Change Law.

BREAKING GROUND

In one closely watched case, a Peruvian farmer took German energy company RWE to court, alleging its emissions helped melt an Andean glacier threatening to flood his home.

Swiss cement producer Holcim is being sued by Indonesian islanders over rising seas, while in another landmark case a Belgian farmer is accusing French fossil fuel major TotalEnergies of contributing to his crop losses.

This month, typhoon victims in the Philippines filed a lawsuit in the UK targeting oil giant Shell, while flood-hit Pakistani farmers announced legal action against RWE and German cement producer Heidelberg Materials in October.

Not all cases involve distant polluters: South Korean farmers are suing a national coal-fired power generator, and lawsuits in New Zealand, Brazil and the United States have targeted climate-harming activity at home.

JUSTICE MOVES SLOWLY

Corporations argue they cannot be held solely responsible for climate damages and so far no court has ordered a company pay compensation for any alleged harm caused by their global emissions.

“It’s a very difficult claim to win, and the courts are very cautious,” Sophie Marjanac, a lawyer and director of legal strategy at the Polluter Pays Project, told AFP.

But experts said this could change in time, particularly as climate attribution science draws a clearer line between humanity’s burning of fossil fuels and the impact on specific extreme weather events.

“It’s worth just underscoring that justice moves gradually,” said White.

Although no case has succeeded in directly linking a company’s emissions to a specific storm or flood, in Brazil judges have ordered that climate damages be paid for illegally felling carbon-rich forests.

In May, a German court dismissed the Peruvian farmer’s claim against RWE, but in a major step, ruled that corporate polluters could — in principle — be held liable for climate damages.

This “set a significant legal precedent” that could influence cases in Europe and beyond, the Grantham Research Institute at the London School of Economics said in a June report.

LITIGATION LANDSLIDE

While climate rulings in one country are not legally binding in another, judges considering the merits of a case look to decisions elsewhere for guidance, said White.

Experts said that corporate polluters should expect an avalanche of litigation as climate damages mount.

“I can’t really foresee a world where these arguments simply go away,” said White.

Zero Carbon Analytics said estimates of climate damages vary but could reach “trillions of dollars globally” by mid-century.

Experts pointed to historic class-action lawsuits against tobacco and asbestos companies as examples where courts eventually held corporations accountable for harm.

“Over the past five years especially there has been an absolute revolution in climate change law... the law can evolve, and I believe that in the future these cases will eventually succeed,” said Marjanac.


Pakistan’s Zardari to begin five-day Iraq visit tomorrow to discuss trade, investment and energy

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Pakistan’s Zardari to begin five-day Iraq visit tomorrow to discuss trade, investment and energy

  • Trade between the two countries remains limited despite potential flagged by officials and business groups
  • Recent high-level contacts between the two sides have centered on pilgrim facilitation, security cooperation

ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari is scheduled to begin a five-day official visit to Iraq from Saturday to discuss a wide range of issues, including greater trade, investment and energy cooperation, the foreign office said in a statement on Friday.

Pakistan and Iraq established diplomatic relations in 1947 and have maintained cordial ties, though economic engagement between the two countries has remained limited. Trade volumes are small, with Iraq not ranking among Pakistan’s major export or import partners, despite officials and business groups identifying potential in sectors such as construction services, pharmaceuticals, and rice and other agricultural exports. Security concerns, weak banking channels and limited connectivity have continued to constrain commercial growth.

The two countries have stepped up high-level official exchanges in recent months, reflecting efforts to broaden and deepen bilateral relations and explore new areas of cooperation across economic, political and people-to-people domains.

“At the invitation of H.E. Dr. Abdul Latif Jamal Rashid, President of the Republic of Iraq, the President of Pakistan, Mr. Asif Ali Zardari, will undertake an official visit to the Republic of Iraq from 20 to 24 December 2025,” the foreign office announced in a statement.

“During the visit, the President will hold high-level meetings with the Iraqi leadership to review the full spectrum of bilateral relations and explore ways to further strengthen cooperation across key areas of mutual interest, including trade and investment, energy, reconstruction, manpower, technology, education, and people-to-people exchanges,” it added. “Discussions will also cover regional and international developments, as well as cooperation at multilateral fora.”

The foreign office said the visit was expected to reinforce traditionally warm ties between the two countries, identify new avenues of partnership and enhance people-to-people linkages, including religious tourism and economic collaboration.

People-to-people ties are strongest in the religious sphere, as Iraq holds significant importance for Pakistani Shia community who travel to holy sites in Najaf and Karbala.

Earlier this month, Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi held talks with his Iraqi counterpart, General Abdul Ameer Al-Shammari, on the sidelines of meetings in Brussels, where both officials agreed to deepen cooperation on security and the facilitation of Pakistani pilgrims traveling to Iraq, including measures to ensure smooth travel and compliance with visa rules.