EGU24-8458, updated on 08 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-8458
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Save the Climate but Don’t Blame Us: Corporate Responses to Climate Litigation

Noah Walker-Crawford
Noah Walker-Crawford
  • London School of Economics and Political Science, Grantham Research Institute, United Kingdom of Great Britain – England, Scotland, Wales (n.walker-crawford@lse.ac.uk)

Fossil fuel companies are no longer denying anthropogenic climate change in recent climate litigation but question the validity of climate science for establishing legal responsibility. Past research on social movement legal mobilization has primarily focused on plaintiffs’ perspectives, showing how they use the judicial process as a site of knowledge production. Drawing attention to the other side, I conduct an analysis of scientific disputes in major climate change lawsuits and develop a typology for studying defendants’ evidentiary arguments. Defendants build evidentiary counter-narratives, challenge the substantive quality of plaintiffs’ claims, and attack the scientific integrity of compromising evidence. Litigants’ legal narratives and factual claims are linked to broader normative concerns about how the underlying issues should be resolved. Fossil fuel companies’ legal arguments reflect broader strategies to evade responsibility for climate change.

How to cite: Walker-Crawford, N.: Save the Climate but Don’t Blame Us: Corporate Responses to Climate Litigation, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-8458, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-8458, 2024.