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The court orders Dutch to do even more to reduce climate change impacts on Bonaire Island

The Dutch court on Wednesday ruled that the state should set binding greenhouse gas emission?targets?to achieve net zero by 2050 in order to protect the Dutch Caribbean island of Bonaire. This decision was hailed as a major victory by climate activists.

The court gave the Netherlands a deadline of 18 months in which to develop a legally-binding plan to reduce greenhouse gases emissions to zero by 2050, as per international agreements.

Legal experts claim that the case, brought by the environmental group Greenpeace, on behalf of Bonaire's residents, is the first test of climate obligations at a national level, as set out in the landmark 2024 European Climate ruling and the influential World Court advisory opinions of last year.

Greenpeace's legal expert Eefje De Kroon said: "It's a?great victory for the people of Bonaire but also for us all, as the Dutch government must do more to protect those who are already suffering the consequences."

Climate Minister Sophie Hermans stated that the government would review the decision, which may be appealed. However, the court's orders must be implemented.

Impact on Crops, Islanders' Health

Bonaire residents testified to The Hague District Court in October last year that the climate change has made the island unbearably dry and hot, affecting crops and islanders' health.

Bonaire is located in the southern Caribbean and was a former Dutch colony. It became a Dutch special municipality in 2010. Around 20,000 of its residents are Dutch.

The court found that the Dutch climate plans did not adequately address the problems in the Dutch Caribbean. Therefore, the Netherlands will need to develop a separate plan to reduce the impact of climate change on Bonaire and to lower the sea level.

The court also stated that the Netherlands had violated human rights and discriminated the citizens of Bonaire by failing to make separate climate plans for their island.

Jerzy Liiten, the presiding judge of the court, said that the state had not taken timely and sufficient measures to protect residents of Bonaire from the adverse effects of climate changes.

After the verdict, Jackie Bernabela of Bonaire, who had been at the court to hear the decision, wiped her tears away. "We are not second-class citizens anymore. (We have) equality. "I am very happy," she said to reporters.

(source: Reuters)