Neubauer v. Germany

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Neubauer v. Germany
CourtFederal Constitutional Court
StartedFebruary 6, 2020
DecidedApril 29, 2021 (2021-04-29)

Neubauer v. Germany was a 2020 court case in which a group of activists sued over the vagueness present in 2019's Climate Protection Act.

Background

Activists backed by

German basic law.[1] The complaint specifically called out that the state had to protect the right to life, personal freedom, right to property, and human dignity.[2]

Decision

The

Constitutional Court declared part of the Federal Climate Protection Act unconstitutional, as it did not "sufficiently protect people against future infringements and limitations of freedom rights in the wake of gradually intensifying climate change".[3]
It ruled against some of their claims, saying the plaintiffs could not prove the government violated its constitutional duty.

The finance minister responded to the ruling by saying that he would work with the

environment ministry to amend the act.[4] The environmental minister wrote that she would present new climate proposals over the summer.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Treisman, Rachel (April 29, 2021). "German Court Orders Revisions To Climate Law, Citing 'Major Burdens' On Youth". NPR.
  2. ^ "Rechtsanwälte Günther" (PDF). Partnerschaft.
  3. ISSN 2071-8322
    .
  4. . Retrieved 2023-02-10.