The Fort Worth Press - Climate change effect on Peruvian glaciers debated in German court

USD -
AED 3.67299
AFN 73.461535
ALL 95.470844
AMD 401.511986
ANG 1.804666
AOA 913.497938
ARS 1041.734902
AUD 1.610047
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.701732
BAM 1.900477
BBD 2.021844
BDT 121.668238
BGN 1.904503
BHD 0.376924
BIF 2962.725435
BMD 1
BND 1.368451
BOB 6.919504
BRL 6.075024
BSD 1.001351
BTN 86.687526
BWP 13.985871
BYN 3.277104
BYR 19600
BZD 2.011447
CAD 1.445075
CDF 2835.000437
CHF 0.912931
CLF 0.036626
CLP 1010.610269
CNY 7.314294
CNH 7.324425
COP 4342.89
CRC 501.987154
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 107.145981
CZK 24.51475
DJF 178.31913
DKK 7.238485
DOP 61.334551
DZD 135.796951
EGP 50.361799
ERN 15
ETB 125.457381
EUR 0.97023
FJD 2.32725
FKP 0.823587
GBP 0.81885
GEL 2.84024
GGP 0.823587
GHS 14.92066
GIP 0.823587
GMD 72.500947
GNF 8656.910759
GTQ 7.730952
GYD 209.501414
HKD 7.783505
HNL 25.472248
HRK 7.379548
HTG 130.723336
HUF 400.374997
IDR 16365.7
ILS 3.57699
IMP 0.823587
INR 86.531503
IQD 1311.81312
IRR 42099.999585
ISK 140.801861
JEP 0.823587
JMD 158.212842
JOD 0.709096
JPY 156.078976
KES 129.506495
KGS 87.449642
KHR 4043.279906
KMF 479.149934
KPW 900.000111
KRW 1450.970153
KWD 0.308498
KYD 0.834507
KZT 531.226011
LAK 21845.089446
LBP 89672.241063
LKR 296.839016
LRD 190.261488
LSL 18.747753
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 4.95088
MAD 10.060051
MDL 18.905656
MGA 4694.347543
MKD 59.722573
MMK 3247.960992
MNT 3398.000107
MOP 8.031017
MRU 39.783891
MUR 46.830238
MVR 15.405014
MWK 1736.354714
MXN 20.78101
MYR 4.499029
MZN 63.910153
NAD 18.747753
NGN 1559.519843
NIO 36.847015
NOK 11.413545
NPR 138.699083
NZD 1.783655
OMR 0.384995
PAB 1.001341
PEN 3.763738
PGK 4.072451
PHP 58.492041
PKR 279.069682
PLN 4.132209
PYG 7888.369562
QAR 3.651408
RON 4.8285
RSD 113.596998
RUB 102.456631
RWF 1394.603104
SAR 3.750903
SBD 8.468008
SCR 14.350358
SDG 600.999873
SEK 11.154825
SGD 1.36471
SHP 0.823587
SLE 22.779788
SLL 20969.49992
SOS 572.236474
SRD 35.055018
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.76194
SYP 13001.999985
SZL 18.74338
THB 34.348501
TJS 10.92993
TMT 3.51
TND 3.22123
TOP 2.342103
TRY 35.5869
TTD 6.799079
TWD 32.789025
TZS 2527.456026
UAH 42.160896
UGX 3689.595864
UYU 44.125507
UZS 12985.006462
VES 54.842667
VND 25295
VUV 118.722008
WST 2.800827
XAF 637.402221
XAG 0.032978
XAU 0.000369
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.771832
XOF 637.402221
XPF 115.886543
YER 249.250136
ZAR 18.701798
ZMK 9001.20203
ZMW 27.813353
ZWL 321.999592
  • NGG

    0.3800

    59.53

    +0.64%

  • RELX

    0.2600

    48.17

    +0.54%

  • SCS

    0.1400

    11.7

    +1.2%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.14

    +0.28%

  • GSK

    -0.0100

    33.43

    -0.03%

  • RIO

    1.3100

    61.1

    +2.14%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.25

    +0.22%

  • RBGPF

    60.0400

    60.04

    +100%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    12.38

    +0.48%

  • BCC

    -0.4900

    127.97

    -0.38%

  • AZN

    -0.3100

    66.6

    -0.47%

  • BCE

    0.3300

    23.15

    +1.43%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    8.48

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.59

    +0.38%

  • BTI

    0.4100

    36.3

    +1.13%

  • BP

    -0.0900

    31.69

    -0.28%

Climate change effect on Peruvian glaciers debated in German court
Climate change effect on Peruvian glaciers debated in German court / Photo: © AFP

Climate change effect on Peruvian glaciers debated in German court

German judges and experts have arrived at the edge of a melting glacier high up in the Peruvian Andes to examine a complaint made by a local farmer who accuses energy giant RWE of threatening his home by contributing to global warming.

Text size:

The visit by the nine-member delegation to the region is the latest stage in a case the plaintiffs hope will set a new worldwide precedent.

Leading the demand for "climate justice" is 41-year-old Peruvian farmer Saul Luciano Lliuya, who lives in the mountains close to the city of Huaraz.

He has filed suit against the German firm RWE, saying its greenhouse gas emissions are responsible for the melting of nearby glaciers.

The trip was ordered by the Higher Regional Court in the northern German city of Hamm, where Lliuya submitted his claim against RWE, having previously had his case dismissed by another court in Essen.

The delegation must determine what risk the melting glaciers pose to the city of Huaraz and its 120,000 inhabitants below the Palcacocha glacier.

"We want the RWE company to be held responsible for environmental damages," Lliuya, a farmer and tourist guide supported by the German environmental NGO Germanwatch, told AFP.

"In general they have polluted all over the world and with this claim we are trying to do something," added Lliuya.

RWE operates in 27 countries in the world, including Chile and Brazil, but not Peru.

The claim "was rejected in the first instance because it did not have any legal basis and did not respect German civil law," RWE spokesman Guido Steffen told AFP.

"We are confident this will happen again with the appeal."

RWE insists that "according to law, individual emitters are not responsible for universal processes, that are effectively global, such as climate change."

Lliuya and Germanwatch met during the COP20 climate change conference in Lima in 2014, after which the German NGO's activists traveled to Huaraz to discuss a potential claim in Germany.

- Feeling 'impotent' -

Lliuya says his greatest fear is that the melting glaciers result in the Palcacocha lake overflowing.

At an altitude of 4,650 meters (15,000 feet), the huge blue-turquoise lake sits below the Palcaraju and Pucaranra glaciers in the Huascaran national park, and could flood Huaraz below if it bursts its banks.

"As a farmer and citizen I don't want these glaciers to disappear, they're important," said Lliuya.

But he says he feels "impotent" because "you know you're in a risk zone and there are businesses and industries that have caused this."

Lliuya owns a half hectare "chacra" -- the Quechua word for a small farmstead -- on the slopes of the mountain.

He owns chickens and sheep and grows corn and quinoa.

Lliuya lives a modest life with his wife and two children. Their kitchen has few utensils and a wide tree trunk that serves as the dining table.

He is also afraid that a drought in the underground aquifers could threaten local agriculture and Huaraz's water provisions.

- Battle in German courts -

The case against RWE was brought in 2015 and the German company won at the first instance the following year. But in 2017, the court in Hamm agreed to hear the case.

The visit by experts, which was ordered in 2019, was delayed by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Germanwatch and Lliuya want RWE to pay for the costs to protect Huaraz from any eventual flooding.

"This case refers to our historic emissions of greenhouse gases, and we have always complied with governmental limits, including our carbon dioxide emissions," says RWE, which has stated a goal of becoming carbon neutral by 2040.

Peru has lost 51 percent of its glaciers over the last 50 years, the national water authority said in 2020.

Noah Walker-Crawford, a climate change researcher at University College London (UCL) and Germanwatch analyst, told AFP that 1,800 people died in 1941 when Palcacocha flooded Huaraz due to a glacial avalanche.

Since then, the volume of Palcacocha dropped by 96 percent over three decades.

"But then, due to the rapid recession of the glaciers due to global warming, the lake has grown rapidly," said Walker-Crawford.

T.Mason--TFWP