Global warming victims sue US for illegally funding fossil fuel projects
Friends of the Earth (FoE), Greenpeace and the City of Boulder, Colorado, filed a lawsuit in the US District Court in
San Francisco on behalf of their members and citizens who are victims of global warming.
The suit has been filed against two US government agencies -- the Export Import Bank (ExIm) and the Overseas Private
Investment Corporation (OPIC). ExIm and OPIC are taxpayer funded agencies that provide financing and loans to US
corporations for overseas projects that commercial banks deem too risky.
This legal action -- the first of its kind -- alleges that OPIC and ExIm illegally provided over $ 32 bn in financing
and insurance for oil fields, pipelines and coal-fired power plants over the past ten years without assessing their
contribution to global warming and their impact on the US environment as required under key provisions of the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).
NEPA requires all federal agencies to conduct an environmental assessment of programs and project-specificdecisions
having a significant effect on the human environment; however, according to the complaint, OPIC and ExIm have refused
to review their programs' and fossil fuel projects' contributions to global warming under NEPA.
FoE and Greenpeace members involved in the suit include a North Carolina couple who fear their retirement property
will be lost to storm surges, erosion and the rising sea level; one of the largest maple syrup producers in Vermont
who believes his business will be ruined as maple trees disappear from the area; and a marine biologist whose life's
work is in jeopardy because coral reefs he has spent a lifetime studying and enjoying are disappearing at an alarming
rate due to bleaching from rising ocean temperatures.
"We're nervous about climate change -- if we have no maples, we have no farm income and the value of our land will be
devastated," said FoE/Greenpeace members Arthur and Anne Berndt. Regarding the state of the coral reefs off the
Florida Keys, FoE member Dr Phillip Dustan said, "It's tantamount to visiting Sequoia National Forest and finding 90
% of the trees either dead or on the ground."
FoE, Greenpeace, and the City of Boulder view this suit as a critical first step toward compelling the Bush
administration to take action against global warming, and to protect people from its dangerous effects.
After the city council voted to join the lawsuit, Boulder Mayor Will Toor said, "All of the work that the city of
Boulder does to maintain the quality of life for our residents will be negatively impacted by the detrimental effects
of climate change. We believe that this lawsuit is one way force the federal government to start paying attention to
this critical issue."
