Plaintiffs, born between 2006 and 2015, claimed lack of climate action infringed on their constitutional rights
Austria's top court on Friday dismissed a case brought by a dozen minors seeking to force the government to take tougher action against climate change.
The plaintiffs, born between 2006 and 2015, had argued that their constitutional rights were infringed, because the Alpine nation's climate law doesn’t sufficiently protect them from the consequences of global warming.
VATICAN COURT ORDERS CLIMATE PROTESTORS TO PAY $30K IN DAMAGES FOR GLUING HANDS TO PRICELESS STATUE
The Constitutional Court noted that the lawsuit challenged only parts of the legislation and striking those down would distort its original intention.
The Austrian Constitutional Court has dismissed a lawsuit by a dozen minors who claimed the Alpine nation's government was violating their civil rights by supposedly failing to pass sufficient legislation aimed at combating climate change. (Photo by Maksim Konstantinov/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Judges also concluded that amending the law the way that the plaintiffs requested wouldn't resolve the underlying problem and rejected the case on formal grounds.
LEFT-WING GERMAN CHANCELLOR SLAMS 'NUTTY' CLIMATE PROTESTERS BLOCKING STREETS, DEFACING ART
A similar lawsuit in Germany that prompted the government there to set new targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions two years ago.
Austria's climate minister, a member of the environmentalist Green party, wants to revise the law and ensure the country's greenhouse gas emissions reach net-zero by 2040.