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The Climate Litigation Database

Isala v Chief Executive of the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment

Geography
Year
2024
Document Type
Litigation

About this case

Filing year
2024
Status
Decided
Court/admin entity
New ZealandImmigration and Protection Tribunal
Case category
Suits against governmentsHuman RightsClimate migration
Principal law
New ZealandImmigration Act 1987New ZealandImmigration Act 2009
At issue
Whether there are exceptional circumstances of a humanitarian nature, stemming from climate change, against liability for deportation.
Topics
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Documents

Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics 
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Summary

This was a humanitarian appeal by the appellant, a 68-year-old citizen of Tuvalu, against his deportation liability, arising from his unlawful presence in New Zealand. Tribunal Member Cochrane, on February 12, 2024, allowed the appeal, ordering to grant the appellant a resident visa. The decision was largely based on the lack of family support available to the appellant in his home island in the likely disasters caused by climate change, which made deportation unjust or unduly harsh to the appellant. Particular weight was placed on Tavalu being an atoll that was lying lower than the Funafuti atoll, stating that “Nanumaga will be observing similar, if not worse, local climate change stressors.” The Tribunal also took into account appellant's expressed concern about the impacts of climate change and the absence of family support when disasters hit, as his only family would be on another island, and he would be without family support on Nanumaga. The Tribunal also considered that the maritime travel in reaching another island in the wake of a disaster may not be timely or possible.

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Group
Topics
Risk
Impacted group
Just transition
Renewable energy
Fossil fuel
Economic sector
Adaptation/resilience