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Bundesverfassungsgericht, Order 1 BvR 2656/18, 1 BvR 96/20, 1 BvR 78/20, 1 BvR 288/20, 1 BvR 96/20, 1 BvR 78/20

Date of judgement: 24 March 2021

Court: Federal Constitutional Court of Germany 

Citation(s): BVerfG, Order of the First Senate of 24 March 2021 – 1 BvR 2656/18 -, paras. 1-270

Short summary 

In its decision, the Federal Constitutional Court classified the German Climate Protection Act in its current form as violative of fundamental rights because it disproportionately shifts the burden of greenhouse gas reduction to future generations, thereby recognising for the first time the existence and violation of the intertemporal dimension of their civil rights. 

Summary by: Robert Los

Link to original judgement 

Click here to open the case in PDF format


Weight of decision 

The order bears immense weight in Germany as the judgement indirectly grants a right to future generations with regard to protection or relief from CO2 emissions and other climate changes. 

Key facts

The Federal Climate Change Act (Klimaschutzgesetz – KSG) was drafted in response to the need for greater climate action efforts. Its purpose is to afford protection against the effects of global climate change (§ 1 S.1), and as stated under § 1 S.3, the basis of the KSG is the obligation under the Paris Agreement as well as the commitment made by the Federal Republic of Germany to pursue the long-term goal of greenhouse gas neutrality by 2050. 

Greenhouse gas emissions must be gradually reduced by the target year 2030 by at least 55%, relative to 1990 levels (§ 3(1)). In conjunction with Annex 2, § 4(1) sets out the annual permissible emission levels for various sectors in line with the reduction quota for the target year 2030. Provisions applicable beyond 2030 are not contained in the KSG. Rather, § 4(6) provides that in the year 2025, the Federal Government must – by way of ordinances – set annually decreasing emission levels for periods following 2030.

In support of their constitutional claims, the complainants − some of whom live in Bangladesh and Nepal − relied primarily on constitutional duties of protection arising from Art. 2(2) of the German Constitution Grundgesetz (GG), and Art. 14(1) GG, as well as the a fundamental right to a future in accordance with human dignity, and the fundamental right to an ecological minimum standard of living (ökologisches Existenzminimum), which they derived from Art. 2(1) GG in conjunction with Art. 20a GG and from Art. 2(1) GG in conjunction with Art. 1(1) GG. 

With regard to future burdens arising from the obligations to reduce emissions in the periods following 2030 – described by the complainants as an “emergency stop” – they relied on fundamental freedoms more generally.

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