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South Korean constitutional court says climate law needs more future emissions targets

South Korea's top court stated on Thursday that the nation's climate change law was conditionally unconstitutional, citing a lack of emissions targets for 2031 and beyond, in a landmark ruling after activists blamed the federal government of stopping working to effectively take on environment modification.

About 200 plaintiffs including young climate activists and even some babies filed petitions to the constitutional court considering that 2020, accusing the federal government of delaying the task of minimizing carbon emissions to future policymakers and more youthful generations.

The court said the nation's carbon neutrality act, enacted in 2010 and revised later to design emissions targets by 2030 and the goal of reaching carbon neutrality by 2050, stopped working to present any quantitative levels for the decreases targets in between 2031 and 2049.

Because there is no system that can successfully make sure gradual and constant reductions until 2050, it stipulates reduction targets that would move an excessive concern to the future, doing not have minimum requirements as a protective step corresponding to the danger of the climate crisis, the chief justice said as he handed down the verdict.

The environment ministry did not right away provide a. comment.

(source: Reuters)