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South Korean teenager activist wishes for landmark court ruling on climate change

Yoon Hyeonjeong, a 19yearold South Korean activist, says the fate of her yearslong fight for more action to tackle environment modification hinges on what might be a. landmark ruling by the country's leading court on Thursday.

Yoon is amongst about 200 complainants, consisting of young. ecologists like herself and even infants, in petitions. submitted to the Constitutional Court because 2020, which argue the. government is violating its citizens' human rights by not. successfully tackling climate change.

Climate advocacy groups say it will be the very first high court. ruling on a government's environment action in Asia, potentially. setting a precedent in an area where comparable claims have been. submitted in Taiwan and Japan. In April, Europe's top human rights. court ruled the Swiss federal government had actually breached the rights of its. citizens by failing to do enough to combat environment change.

Picketing on streets, policy propositions, these projects. weren't enough to produce real modifications, said Yoon, who is. hoping the court judgment will assist take down administrative obstacles. on climate policy.

Lawyers for the federal government state authorities are doing. everything possible to cut carbon emissions.

Han Wha-jin, who was environment minister, said in May the. government's emission decrease targets did not infringe on. people's rights, though the constitutional petition supplied a. public online forum about the intensity of the environment crisis.

In 2019, Yoon remained in her third year of intermediate school when. she viewed an environment crisis documentary that she said surprised. her into action.

In spite of not being particularly outgoing, she chose to try. and follow in the footsteps of the similarity Greta Thunberg, a. Swedish climate activist who has inspired a worldwide youth. motion demanding more powerful action against climate modification.

Yoon composed mottos with crayons to picket at schools,. informing her elders to stop damaging the planet. She later. dropped out of high-school and left her home town to concentrate on the. environment movement in the capital Seoul.

South Korea's constitutional court does not award damages or. order police procedures but can rule existing laws are. unconstitutional and demand parliament to modify them.

Germany's constitutional court ruled in 2021 the country. must update its environment law to set out how it will bring carbon. emissions to almost no by 2050.

Researchers say an international temperature increase beyond 1.5 degrees. Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above the preindustrial average. will trigger disastrous and permanent impact on the planet,. from melting ice sheets to the collapse of ocean currents.

South Korea is looking for to reach carbon neutrality by 2050,. but remains the second-highest coal polluter among G20. countries after Australia, data showed, with sluggish adoption of. renewables.

The nation in 2015 revised down its 2030 targets for. greenhouse gas reductions in the commercial sector however kept its. nationwide goal of cutting emissions by 40% of 2018 levels.

Requiring an end to the use of nonrenewable fuel source, Yoon stated. flooding and rising temperatures brought on by climate modification were. having instant impacts on individuals's lives.

We currently have tools to cut carbon emissions. That is,. stop using nonrenewable fuel sources, she said.

(source: Reuters)