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A Shell logo at a fuel station with a plane behind. Photo: Reuters

Environment: Man who beat oil giant Shell wins prize for contributing to global peace

  • Acting for Friends of the Earth, lawyer Roger Cox won a ruling against Shell requiring the energy giant to cut its carbon emissions by 45 per cent by 2030
  • Cox previously brought a case against the Netherlands’ government to cut emissions, sparking similar cases around the world
Environment

Roger Cox, a lawyer who helped win cases forcing the Dutch government and oil giant Shell to cut carbon emissions, is to receive a 10,000-euro (US$11,410) award in Germany for contributing to global peace.

Organisers of the Dresden Prize said Cox was being honoured for “his groundbreaking contribution to fighting for compliance with global climate targets by means of law.”

Shell ordered to cut carbon emissions in landmark climate case

Past recipients of the prize include former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, American civil rights activist Tommie Smith and Kim Phuc, who became known as the “Napalm Girl” from an iconic 1972 Associated Press photo during the Vietnam War.

Acting for the Dutch arm of Friends of the Earth, Cox won a ruling against Shell last year that requires the energy giant to cut its carbon emissions by net 45 per cent by 2030 compared to 2019 levels.

Dutch lawyer Roger Cox, right, toasts winning landmark climate cases. Photo: AP

Climate activists hailed the decision as a victory for the planet that built on a 2015 case Cox brought requiring the Netherlands’ government to cut emissions at least 25 per cent by the end of 2020 from benchmark 1990 levels.

Since then, similar cases have been brought against governments and corporations around the world, with mixed results.

“Peace is more than the absence of war,” the organisers of the Dresden Prize said. “Standing up for peace in times of climate crisis means acting responsibly and fighting for a humane and thus peaceful life for future generations.”

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