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Climate Court Voices

Podcast by Climate Court Voices

English

News & politics

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About Climate Court Voices

Climate Court Voices is a podcast dedicated to shedding light on pivotal climate litigation battles worldwide and amplifying the voices of those at the forefront of climate justice and environmental activism.

All episodes

7 episodes

episode What happens when the bedrock of US climate policy is wiped away? artwork

What happens when the bedrock of US climate policy is wiped away?

For nearly two decades, the Endangerment Finding served as the legal bedrock of American climate policy, compelling the Environmental Protection Agency to treat carbon pollution as a threat to human survival. Today, that foundation is gone. Following the Trump administration's landmark repeal, the very framework used to regulate US emissions has vanished. In this episode of Climate Court Voices, Noah Perch-Ahern, an attorney at Greenberg Glusker LLP [https://www.greenbergglusker.com/noah-perch-ahern], joins us to break down the fallout, from the firestorm of litigation hitting the courts to the sudden, high-stakes shift toward a patchwork of state-level regulations. Timestamps: (00:00) Intro (02:23) A landmark Supreme Court ruling changes everything (06:50) The Endangerment Finding changes everything (09:37) Trump announces the "biggest deregulation action in US history" (11:12) Legal challenges pile up (13:22) What happens now? (20:33) What happens to the EPA without the Endangerment Finding? (22:38) Can states step in?

15 May 2026 - 26 min
episode The accountability decade: tracing the evolution of climate litigation artwork

The accountability decade: tracing the evolution of climate litigation

In 2015, a Dutch court became the first in the world to order a government to take stronger action on climate. Since then, climate litigation has evolved into a global accountability system [https://climatelitigationnetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/Laying-the-foundations-for-our-shared-future-Climate-Litigation-Network-ONLINE.pdf] used by private actors, civil society and individuals locally, regionally, nationally and internationally to hold governments and corporate polluters accountable. In this episode of Climate Court Voices, Lucy Maxwell, Co-Director of the Climate Litigation Network, helps us understand how a surge in climate lawsuits in the past decade has forced governments to set clear rules for national climate action, influenced public opinion, and reshaped how investors and regulators perceive climate risk. She discusses key court battles and the legal building blocks they have established, how corporate climate litigation is beginning to catch up, and what cases we should look out for in 2026. Timestamps: (00:00) Intro (01:38) The world's top court rules on climate (03:21) Introducing Lucy (04:20) The meaning of the Urgenda case (07:15) New legal building blocks (11:53) The rise of corporate climate litigation (15:12) Pushback and progress in corporate litigation (19:27) What happens when rulings are ignored? (23:42) Where is climate litigation heading? (25:43) Cases to look out for in 2026

4 Mar 2026 - 31 min
episode How a group of elderly Swiss women proved that climate protection is a basic human right artwork

How a group of elderly Swiss women proved that climate protection is a basic human right

In 2016, the KlimaSeniorinnen – an association of over 2,000 senior Swiss women – launched a legal challenge against their government, alleging that inadequate climate policies violated their fundamental human rights. After years of dismissals in domestic courts, the group secured a landmark victory at the European Court of Human Rights in April 2024. The ruling was unprecedented, marking the first time an international court has recognized that state climate inaction constitutes a human rights violation. In this episode of Climate Court Voices, we sit down with Elisabeth Stern, a cultural anthropologist and board member of KlimaSeniorinnen. Elisabeth shares the group's journey from grassroots organization to legal pioneers, detailing the dismissals they faced at home and the ongoing uphill battle to ensure the Swiss government turns this historic judgment into tangible climate action. Timestamps: (00:00) Intro (01:37) Who is Elisabeth Stern? (04:27) KlimaSeniorinnen v Swiss government (06:35) Bringing their case to Europe's top human rights court (10:16) Court finds human rights violations (13:15) Breaking down the verdict (14:23) Overwhelming support abroad (16:16) Dismissal at home (18:15) Struggle for accountability (21:10) Outreach efforts (23:25) A blueprint for future climate court cases

2 Feb 2026 - 26 min
episode What happens when the US awards $20 billion in climate grants, and then wants them back? artwork

What happens when the US awards $20 billion in climate grants, and then wants them back?

In April 2024, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) under the Biden administration awarded $20 billion in grants to eight organizations tasked with financing thousands of clean energy and other climate projects across the country, especially in low-income and disadvantaged communities. But that work was abruptly halted when the new Trump-appointed EPA Administrator, Lee Zeldin, froze the funds in February, claiming the program was riddled with waste and fraud. In this episode of Climate Court Voices, we speak with Brooke Durham, Director of Communications for Climate United, one of the eight companies to be awarded the grant. She talks about the projects her organization had begun funding with the EPA grant and the ongoing uphill battle to unfreeze it. Timestamps: (00:00) Intro (01:29) What is Climate United? (02:47) Receiving the EPA grant (03:48) The projects the grant would have helped finance (05:05) The new Trump administration takes office (06:10) EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announces freeze with a video on X (09:00) Climate United reacts to the video (09:23) Understanding Zeldin's accusations (11:19) Climate United sues the EPA, Zeldin and Citibank (12:32) What the freeze meant for Climate United (15:52) Dozens of projects in limbo (17:28) An ongoing legal battle (21:35) What happens when the US government wants its money back?

15 Dec 2025 - 23 min
episode These young climate activists took Montana to court and won. Now they’re going after Trump artwork

These young climate activists took Montana to court and won. Now they’re going after Trump

In June 2023, 16 young people made history in the US as their lawsuit against the state of Montana became the first youth-led constitutional case to reach trial. They argued that Montana's permissive approach to approving fossil fuel projects violated their constitutional right to a clean and healthful environment. They won. Now, some of these young activists are taking on Trump. In this episode of Climate Court Voices, we speak with Rikki Held – lead plaintiff on the Held v Montana case and a plaintiff in a new lawsuit against the Trump administration, and Nate Bellinger – senior staff attorney at our Children's Trust, the non-profit law firm behind the two climate lawsuits. They discuss the increasing role of youth in climate litigation battles and how the US has changed under the second Trump administration. Timestamps: (00:00) Intro (01:38) Climate change in Montana (06:16) Held v Montana (07:57) Going to trial (11:47) Young plaintiffs score historic win (14:06) Appeal and second victory (15:05) US climate policy under Trump (18:57) Trump is bringing back coal (19:36) Lighthiser v Trump (22:53) Case dismissed and appeal (24:26) Rule of law under Trump (27:29) Role of youth in climate litigation (29:40) Rikki's advice for young climate activists

17 Oct 2025 - 33 min
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