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The Climate Litigation Database

Individuals v. Germany

Geography
Year
2022
Document Type
Litigation

About this case

Filing year
2022
Status
decided
Court/admin entity
GermanyFederal Constitutional Court
Case category
Suits against governments (Global)
Principal law
Germany
At issue
Whether the German legislature was violating its constitutional duties, by not introducing a speed limit on highways.
Topics
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Documents

Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics 
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Summary

In December 2022, the German Constitutional Court dismissed a complaint by two individuals against the German legislature for failing to standardise legal pathways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, in particular by introducing a speed limit on Germany highways. The individuals submitted that German law required these pathways to ensure a timely, transparent and fair distribution of the burdens associated with the reduction of greenhouse gases to ensure the protection of future rights and freedoms – as required by Article 20a of the Constitution. The individuals submitted that the measures taken to reduce CO2 emissions in the transport sector were insufficient to meet the emission levels required by the Climate Protection Act by 2030. The complaint was dismissed as inadmissible. The Court held that the complainants did not sufficiently substantiate their claim, failing to show that there would be considerable restrictions on fundamental freedoms by the end of the decade, because the allowable emissions for the transport sector were being used up too quickly. The Court also held that it was not evidenced why further emissions reductions had to be achieved through the means of a speed limit.

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Group
Topics
Policy instrument
Impacted group
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector