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Sri Lanka issues fresh landslide warnings as toll nears 500
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Root says England still 'well and truly' in second Ashes Test
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Chelsea's Maresca says rotation unavoidable
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Italian president urges Olympic truce at Milan-Cortina torch ceremony
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Norris edges Verstappen in opening practice for season-ending Abu Dhabi GP
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Australia race clear of England to seize control of second Ashes Test
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Stocks, dollar rise before key US inflation data
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Trump strategy shifts from global role and vows 'resistance' in Europe
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Turkey orders arrest of 29 footballers in betting scandal
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Arsenal's Merino has earned striking role: Arteta
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Putin offers India 'uninterrupted' oil in summit talks with Modi
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New Trump strategy vows shift from global role to regional
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French town offers 1,000-euro birth bonuses to save local clinic
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Eyes of football world on 2026 World Cup draw with Trump centre stage
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South Africa rugby coach Erasmus extends contract until 2031
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Ex-Manchester Utd star Lingard announces South Korea exit
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Australia edge ominously within 106 runs of England in second Ashes Test
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McIlroy survives as Min Woo Lee surges into Australian Open hunt
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German factory orders rise more than expected
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India's Modi and Russia's Putin talk defence, trade and Ukraine
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Flooding kills two as Vietnam hit by dozens of landslides
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Italy to open Europe's first marine sanctuary for dolphins
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Hong Kong university suspends student union after calls for fire justice
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Asian markets rise ahead of US data, expected Fed rate cut
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Nigerian nightlife finds a new extravagance: cabaret
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LeBron scoring streak ends as Hachimura, Reaves lift Lakers
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England all out for 334 in second Ashes Test
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Hong Kong university axes student union after calls for fire justice
Trump's fossil fuel agenda challenged in youth climate suit
Life, liberty and the right to a stable climate?
A group of young Americans say President Donald Trump is trampling their inalienable rights through an aggressive push for fossil fuels and a crusade against federal climate science -- and on Tuesday, a rural courtroom in Missoula, Montana will be their stage in a closely watched showdown.
Lighthiser v. Trump is emblematic of a growing global trend of legal action as a tool to push action on planetary warming amid political inertia -- or outright hostility.
"It's very intimidating to think about my future," lead plaintiff Eva Lighthiser recently told AFP in Washington, where she and other plaintiffs represented by the nonprofit Our Children's Trust recently traveled to lobby lawmakers.
The 19-year-old from Livingston, Montana, described smoke-choked skies, relentless floods, and her family's climate-driven relocation as "a lot to reconcile with, as somebody who's just entering adulthood."
Over two days of hearings, she and 21 co-plaintiffs -- all young adults or minors -- will testify about their health and other harms they have endured from the Trump administration's actions.
At issue are three executive orders that "unleash" fossil fuel development and curb the electric vehicle market; invoke emergency powers to accelerate drilling; and designate coal a "mineral," granting it priority status for extraction.
The plaintiffs also allege that scrubbing climate science from federal research has obscured the risks from global warming.
Their lawyers have called on several expert witnesses, including climate scientists, a pediatrician and even former senior White House official John Podesta, to weigh in on the legality of the directives at issue.
"This is really the first time plaintiffs have been able to put on live, cross-examined testimony against the federal government about how it is causing the climate crisis and injuring young people," Andrea Rogers, a lawyer with Our Children's Trust, told AFP.
- A long road -
The plaintiffs are seeking a preliminary injunction that could open the door to a full trial.
The federal government, joined by 19 conservative-leaning states and the territory of Guam, wants the case thrown out.
Most observers give the youths long odds. Judge Dana Christensen, an Obama appointee with a record of pro-environment rulings, is presiding.
But even if the plaintiffs notch a win, the case would then almost certainly land before the conservative-dominated Supreme Court.
"We don't have strong judicial precedent for there being a constitutional right to a clean environment at the federal level," Michael Gerrard, a professor of environmental law at Columbia University told AFP.
"They're trying to frame it as a matter of substance or due process, but that would require novel rulings from the courts to apply that to climate change," he continued, adding: "This Supreme Court is more about taking away rights than granting them, unless you're a gun owner."
Still, the legal team hopes momentum is building in the wake of recent state-level victories.
In 2023, a Montana judge sided with young plaintiffs who argued ignoring climate impacts when issuing oil and gas permits violated their constitutional right to a clean environment.
A year later, youth activists in Hawaii reached a settlement requiring the state to accelerate decarbonization of its transport sector.
But the record has proven bleak at the federal level.
The most prominent case was filed in 2015, Juliana v. United States, and eventually got dismissed after the Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal earlier this year.
The new suit argues that the government is violating due process by stripping citizens of fundamental rights, overstepping executive authority under laws like the Clean Air Act, and breaching its duty under the Fourteenth Amendment by knowingly worsening climate risks.
Gerrard said it would be intriguing to see whether the government will try to contest the factual claims brought by the plaintiffs, or focus instead on legal arguments.
The government is expected to argue these are policy questions for elected officials, not by courts.
But Rogers argued it was the government straying from its lane.
"Whether the executive branch is violating the constitutional rights of young people -- that's precisely the kind of question courts have resolved for decades."
M.O.Allen--AT