REUTERS/Remo Casilli/File PhotoJuly 27 (Reuters) - The number of court cases related to climate change has more than doubled in five years as impacts ranging from shrinking water resources to dangerous heatwaves hit home for millions, a report said on Thursday.
Some 2,180 climate-related lawsuits have been filed across 65 jurisdictions over the past five years, according to the report by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and New York's Columbia University, which tracks ongoing climate cases in a global database.
While the United States still dominates with more than 1,500 cases, other countries are seeing increases.
About 17 percent of cases have been filed in developing countries, according to the report, with rainforest-rich Brazil and Indonesia among the countries seeing the most.
Youth climate activists have already played a central role, with 34 cases brought forward on behalf of children, teens, and young adults.
Persons:
Remo Casilli, Maria Antonia Tigre, Andrew Raine ,, Shell, Tigre, Gloria Dickie, Conor Humphries
Organizations:
della, REUTERS, UN, Programme, New York's Columbia University, Columbia's, European, of Human, Thomson
Locations:
Italy, Rome, New, United States, Brazil, Indonesia, Toronto