Montana Youth Activists Win Historic Climate Change Lawsuit

โ€œGame-changer rulingโ€ has implications for future climate change lawsuits in the US and around the world.
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Youth plaintiff Kian Tanner (far right) speaks to community supporters gathered at Helena's Pioneer Park following the conclusion of trial on June 20, as fellow plaintiffs look on. Credit: Dana Drugmand

A Montana court ruled in favor of 16 young people who put their state government on trial in June in the first constitutional climate trial in U.S. history. In an order issued Monday, Judge Kathy Seeley in the First Judicial District Court of Montana found that the state had violated youth plaintiffsโ€™ constitutional rights, including the right to a clean and healthful environment, because of Montanaโ€™s pro-fossil fuel policies, which require the state to disregard climate change and greenhouse gas emissions in environmental reviews.

โ€œAs fires rage in the West, fueled by fossil fuel pollution, todayโ€™s ruling in Montana is a game-changer that marks a turning point in this generationโ€™s efforts to save the planet from the devastating effects of human-caused climate chaos,โ€ Julia Olson, chief legal counsel and executive director of Our Childrenโ€™s Trust, a nonprofit law firm that represented the youth plaintiffs, said in a statement. โ€œThis is a huge win for Montana, for youth, for democracy, and for our climate. More rulings like this will certainly come.โ€

The Held v. State of Montana case, first filed in 2020, argued that Montanaโ€™s longstanding actions and policies supporting fossil fuel development โ€” despite clear knowledge of the climate consequences โ€” contribute to environmental degradation and violate the young plaintiffsโ€™ rights to a โ€œclean and healthful environment.โ€ Montanaโ€™s constitution explicitly grants that right, as do some other state constitutions, like Pennsylvania’s and New York’s. Montanaโ€™s constitution also extends it and other inalienable rights to its youngest citizens.

During Montanaโ€™s 2023 legislative session, which ended in May, the Republican supermajority passed a number of bills that weaken environmental protections. This included a controversial amendment to the Montana Environmental Policy Act (MEPA) that some had called the โ€œmost aggressiveโ€ anti-climate bill in the nation. That law, House Bill 971, dubbed the โ€œMEPA limitation,โ€ expressly prohibited state agencies, including the Montana Department of Environmental Quality, from evaluating greenhouse gas emissions in environmental permits. As the Held case went to trial, the question of this statuteโ€™s constitutional compliance was front and center.

In her decision, Judge Seeley left no doubt that H.B. 971 was โ€œunconstitutional on its face.โ€ Her order overturns it, as well as another related piece of new legislation, Senate Bill 557. This bill bars MEPA litigation brought against the state on climate grounds from thwarting or delaying any permitting or authorization.

โ€œThis ruling, this case; it is truly historic. We are heard,โ€ 18-year-old plaintiff Kian Tanner said in a statement. โ€œFrankly the elation and joy in my heart is overwhelming in the best way. We set the precedent not only for the United States, but for the world.โ€

Montana Democratic state Senator Mary Ann Dunwell, whose district covers eastern Helena, told DeSmog that the ruling sends a strong message to her Montana legislature colleagues who are climate deniers.

โ€œIt states in our constitution that the legislature has a responsibility, itโ€™s our job to make sure that we uphold that right to a clean and healthful environment,โ€ she said. โ€œThe majority Republican legislature these past two sessions has violated that.โ€

โ€œTo me itโ€™s vindicating, this ruling is vindicating,โ€ Dunwell added. โ€œThe youth had a strong case and frankly the state had a very weak one.โ€

In its narrow defense presented in just one day, state attorneys steered clear of engaging in climate science. To the extent the state did discuss climate impacts, it claimed that Montanaโ€™s emissions โ€œare simply too minuscule to make any difference.โ€

The Montana attorney generalโ€™s office did not reply to a request for comment from DeSmog. The office sent a comment to Montanaโ€™s ABC/Fox News website stating that, โ€œthe ruling is absurd,โ€ and the trial was a โ€œweeklong taxpayer-funded publicity stuntโ€ that showed Montana has โ€œno impact on the global climate.โ€ The comment noted the state will appeal.   

But Seeleyโ€™s ruling recognized the scientific fact that every additional ton of greenhouse gas pollution emitted exacerbates climate impacts. โ€œMontanaโ€™s GHG [greenhouse gas] emissions and climate change have been proven to be a substantial factor in causing climate impacts to Montanaโ€™s environment and harm and injury to the Youth Plaintiffs,โ€ she wrote.

The decision further affirmed that Montanaโ€™s right to a clean and healthful environment includes climate, as a stable climate is โ€œpart of the environmental life-support system.โ€

Inspiration for Similar Climate Lawsuits

Professor Michael Gerrard, director of the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School, called the ruling โ€œthe strongest decision on climate change ever issued by any court.โ€

โ€œAfter a trial where climate scientists testified under oath and were subject to cross examination (very rare in itself), the court issued a 103-page decision that found that fossil fuel use is the principal cause of climate change, which is in turn causing serious health and environmental impacts that will continue to get worse,โ€ he wrote in a statement emailed to DeSmog. 

He added that the court found that renewable energy, like wind, solar, and hydro, can economically substitute for fossil fuels. 

This ruling โ€œmay inspire similar lawsuits around the world,โ€ Gerrard said.

Attorneys for the Montana youth plaintiffs. Credit: Dana Drugmand

Another youth-led climate case spearheaded by Our Childrenโ€™s Trust will be going to trial next summer in Hawaii, the scene of the deadliest wildfire disaster the United States has seen in more than a century. Like Montana, Hawaii also has the right to a clean and healthful environment embedded in its constitution, and this case involves climate pollution authorized by the stateโ€™s Department of Transportation.

โ€œThis [Montana] decision could have an impact on the OCT case pending in Hawaii, which is scheduled for trial in 2024 and it may well inspire other cases in states like Pennsylvania and New York with similar constitutional provisions,โ€ Patrick Parenteau, professor of law emeritus and senior fellow for climate policy at Vermont Law and Graduate School, told DeSmog. โ€œThe [federal] Juliana case has inspired youth lawsuits in other countries like Germany, France, and Columbia, as well as the European Court of Human Rights, and this decision is sure to spur even more.โ€

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Dana is an environmental journalist focusing on climate change and climate accountability reporting. She writes regularly for DeSmog covering topics such as fossil fuel industry opposition to climate action, climate change lawsuits, greenwashing and false climate solutions, and clean transportation.

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