New Jersey has now joined the wave ofย lawsuits seeking to hold the fossil fuel industryย accountable for climate impacts.ย The city of Hoboken today filedย a case against major oil and gas companies and the American Petroleum Institute (API), a powerfulย industryย trade groupย whichย has played a major roleย in promoting โuncertaintyโ about climateย science.
The lawsuit seeks to recover costs associated with climate impacts like extreme flooding and sea level rise. Like other climate liability lawsuits targeting fossil fuel companies, Hoboken’s suit alleges that the oil and gas companies and their lobbying groupย not only knew early on about the climate harms resulting from their products, but actively engaged in campaigns of deception to undermine climate science and avoid policyย responses.
โHere in Hoboken, we are now paying the price for these deceptive actions,โ Hoboken Mayor Ravi S. Bhalla said during a press conference held Wednesday, September 2. โWe cannot sit idly by and let Big Oil continue profiting at the expense of Hobokenย residents.โ
Defendants named in the Hoboken lawsuit include BP, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil, Shell, and Phillips 66, plus the largest trade association in the U.S. for oil and gas, API. This lawsuit is the second climate case in recent months targeting API specifically. The Big Oil trade association is also a defendant in a lawsuit filed June 24 by Minnesota Attorney General Keithย Ellison.
Hoboken’s lawsuit points to the long history of the oil and gas industry’s knowledge of the potentially damaging impacts of its products on the climate, and the differences between what they came to say about the issue publicly versus privately over time. It cites Frank Ikard, API President in 1965, when he delivered a dire warning about a report on climate changeย during an oil industry conference:ย โ[T]here is still time to save the worldโs peoples from the catastrophic consequences of pollution, but the time is runningย out.โ
But decades later, API‘s approach toward climate change had evolved.ย The lawsuit quotes a 1998ย internal action report in which API says, โUnless โclimate changeโ becomes a non-issue โฆ there may be no moment when we can declare victory for ourย efforts.โ
APIย did not immeditately respond to requests for comment fromย DeSmog.
According to Hobokenโs legal complaint, โDefendants, some of the worldโs largest fossil fuel companies and their largest trade association, have known for more than a half-century that the fossil fuels they extract, produce, market, and sell on a massive scale are causing accelerating climate change that poses grave threats to society โ sea level rise, extreme heat, and increasingly destructive storms, among many others. Instead of addressing those threats, Defendants have spent the last fifty years deceiving the public about their central role in causing climate change in order to grease the wheels of their ever-expanding production and sale of fossilย fuels.โ
The lawsuit includes legal claims of public and private nuisance, trespass, negligence, and violation of New Jerseyโs Consumer Fraud Act. The city is seeking monetary damages โ in other words, demanding that the oil companies help pay for climate-related costs that otherwise are saddled ontoย taxpayers.
Exxon spokesperson Casey Norton told DeSmog,ย โThis suit does nothing to advance meaningful actions to reduce the risks of climate change. The claims are baseless and without merit. We look forward to defending the company inย court.โ
โWe want to be compensated for the costs of climate damages both past, present and future,โ Mayor Bhalla said. Hoboken has already spent hundreds of millions of dollars on resiliency projects, he explained. According to a 2019 study by the Center for Climate Integrity, Hobokenโs estimated costs for sea walls alone by 2040 will add up toย $27.9 million, while the cost for sea walls in Hudson County (which includes Hoboken) is estimated at $505ย million.
Mayor Bhalla said climate resiliency must emphasize protecting the cityโs most vulnerable residents, such as people of color and lower-income families who tend to be disproportionately impacted by fossil fuel pollution and climate disasters like Hurricane Sandy, which devastated the New Jersey coast in 2012. โThis is a racial justice issue,โ heย said.
Hoboken filed its climate lawsuit on September 2 in Hudson County Superior Court, which is a New Jersey state court. Similar climate cases filed by states and municipalities have been embroiled in jurisdictional battles, with fossil fuel companies determined to move the cases to federal courts where they see an easier path to dismissal. None of these climate accountability cases have made it to trial yet, with the exception of a securities fraud case filed by the state of New York against Exxon. A judge dismissed that case lastย December.
โWe fully recognize that a legal decision may not come down for some time,โ Mayor Bhalla said during the press conference. He explained that the city is โjoining the fightโ now for the sake of the younger generations of Hobokenย residents.
โWe donโt believe it is hyperbole to say that what Hoboken, the nation, and the world are facing is an existential threat,โ said Jonathan S. Abady, an attorney with the New York City law firm Emery Celli Brinckerhoff Abady Ward & Maazel LLP, which is providing legal representation for Hoboken at no cost to theย city.
โTime is of the essence,โ Abady said. โAnd time is runningย out.โ
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