It’s Tuesday, March 17, and South Korean teens are suing their government over climate change.

As the number of global COVID-19 cases grow exponentially and more countries institute strict social distancing measures, South Korea has largely gotten its outbreak under control. And now, 30 youth activists in that country are challenging their government in court to enact stronger policies to address another burgeoning crisis: climate change.

The students argue that South Korea’s newly amended climate law — the Framework Act on Low Carbon, Green Growth — doesn’t go far enough to meet the goals of the 2016 Paris

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Agreement and thus infringes on their fundamental rights. The legislation commits to lowering South Korea’s emissions over the next decade by just over 24 percent compared to 2017 levels, but activists claim that much more urgent action is needed to keep global warming below 2 degrees C (3.6 degrees F).

The South Korean teens aren’t the first group of young people to sue their governments over climate change, though the results of this strategy have been mixed. In Colombia, a group of young people successfully sued the government to protect the Amazon rainforest from further deforestation in 2018. But the landmark U.S. youth climate lawsuit Juliana v. United States was dismissed earlier this year.

Still, the young Korean activists are pushing forward. “We want drastic change,” one of the teens, Kim Yujin, told Bloomberg News.

Shannon Osaka

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