-
NASA delays Moon mission over frigid weather
-
First competitors settle into Milan's Olympic village
-
Fela Kuti: first African to get Grammys Lifetime Achievement Award
-
Cubans queue for fuel as Trump issues oil ultimatum
-
'Schitt's Creek' star Catherine O'Hara dead at 71
-
Curran hat-trick seals 11 run DLS win for England over Sri Lanka
-
Cubans queue for fuel as Trump issues energy ultimatum
-
France rescues over 6,000 UK-bound Channel migrants in 2025
-
Surprise appointment Riera named Frankfurt coach
-
Maersk to take over Panama Canal port operations from HK firm
-
US arrests prominent journalist after Minneapolis protest coverage
-
Analysts say Kevin Warsh a safe choice for US Fed chair
-
Trump predicts Iran will seek deal to avoid US strikes
-
US oil giants say it's early days on potential Venezuela boom
-
Fela Kuti to be first African to get Grammys Lifetime Achievement Award
-
Trump says Iran wants deal, US 'armada' larger than in Venezuela raid
-
US Justice Dept releases new batch of documents, images, videos from Epstein files
-
Four memorable showdowns between Alcaraz and Djokovic
-
Russian figure skating prodigy Valieva set for comeback -- but not at Olympics
-
Barcelona midfielder Lopez agrees contract extension
-
Djokovic says 'keep writing me off' after beating Sinner in late-nighter
-
US Justice Dept releasing new batch of Epstein files
-
South Africa and Israel expel envoys in deepening feud
-
French eyewear maker in spotlight after presidential showing
-
Olympic dream 'not over', Vonn says after crash
-
Brazil's Lula discharged after cataract surgery
-
US Senate races to limit shutdown fallout as Trump-backed deal stalls
-
'He probably would've survived': Iran targeting hospitals in crackdown
-
Djokovic stuns Sinner to set up Australian Open final with Alcaraz
-
Mateta omitted from Palace squad to face Forest
-
Gold, silver prices tumble as investors soothed by Trump's Fed pick
-
Trump attorney general orders arrest of ex-CNN anchor covering protests
-
Djokovic 'pushed to the limit' in stunning late-night Sinner upset
-
Tunisia's famed blue-and-white village threatened after record rains
-
Top EU official voices 'shock' at Minneapolis violence
-
Kremlin says agreed to halt strikes on Kyiv until Sunday
-
Carrick calls for calm after flying start to Man Utd reign
-
Djokovic to meet Alcaraz in Melbourne final after five-set marathon
-
Italian officials to testify in trial over deadly migrant shipwreck
-
Iran says defence capabilities 'never' up for negotiation
-
UN appeals for more support for flood-hit Mozambicans
-
Lijnders urges Man City to pile pressure on Arsenal in title race
-
Fulham sign Man City winger Oscar Bobb
-
Strasbourg's Argentine striker Panichelli sets sights on PSG, World Cup
-
Jesus 'made love': Colombian president irks Christians with steamy claim
-
IAEA board meets over Ukraine nuclear safety concerns
-
Eurozone growth beats 2025 forecasts despite Trump woes
-
Israel to partially reopen Gaza's Rafah crossing on Sunday
-
Dutch PM-elect Jetten says not yet time to talk to Putin
-
Social media fuels surge in UK men seeking testosterone jabs
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.
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.
Ch.Campbell--AT