
Major oil companies face first 'climate death' lawsuit – DW – 06/18/2025
A US complaint against oil and gas giants including BP and Shell claims they fueled the extreme heat that killed a woman in Seattle. Can the first death by 'climate disaster' claim succeed?
On June 28, 2021, a heatwave saw temperatures rise to over 42 degrees Celsius (108-degrees Fahrenheit) in Seattle, the hottest ever recorded in the US coastal city. On that day, Juliana Leon was found unconscious in her car and died soon after from hyperthermia — the overheating of the body.
Now her daughter, Misti Leon, is suing seven oil and gas companies for wrongful death in a Washington State court. She alleges that they accelerated the extreme heat that led to her mother's death by manufacturing and marketing fossil fuels.
The filing claims the companies — including ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell and BP — had known for decades "that their fossil fuel products were already altering the earth's atmosphere."
These defendants willfully created a "fossil fuel-dependent economy" that would result in "more frequent and destructive weather disasters and foreseeable loss of human life," the complaint alleges.
Record temperatures continued into the evening on June 28, 2021 in Seattle as some residents, including Juliana Leon, succumbed to severe heat stress Image: Ted S. Warren/AP/picture alliance
In the first wrongful death claim of its kind, a win for Leon would "represent a landmark shift in climate litigation," said Maria Antonia Tigre, director of Global Climate Litigation at the New York City-based Sabin Center for Climate Change Law.
While very few cases have "awarded damages" in climate litigation, success in Seattle could see individuals seek "compensatory and even punitive damages" from fossil fuel corporations for their role in climate change, Tigre explained.
Besides seeking damages, the plaintiff also wants the defendants to fund a "public education" campaign to rectify "decades of misinformation" — which Leon says has fueled "consumer confusion" about the link between burning fossil fuels and planetary heating.
Chevron, BP, Shell and ConocoPhillips did not respond to a DW request for comment on the case.
What heat waves do to our bodies and brains
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Big Oil rejects claims in case
The Chevron Corporation, one the world's largest oil and gas producers, rejects the claims made in the lawsuit.
"Exploiting a personal tragedy to promote politicized climate tort litigation is contrary to law, science, and common sense," Chevron spokesperson Theodore Boutrous Jr. said in a statement to US public broadcaster, NPR.
"The court should add this far-fetched claim to the growing list of meritless climate lawsuits that state and federal courts have already dismissed," he added.
But according to Tigre, the case "could create a novel but plausible basis for liability." The filing is based on tort law as opposed to national statutes such as emission regulations that have underpinned most climate litigation cases.
Inside the oil industy's massive lobbying efforts
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Tort law claims seek damages for individuals impacted by climate change, noted Rebekkah Markey-Towler, a research fellow at the Melbourne Climate Futures think tank.
In the past, such civil lawsuits have been a vital means for individuals to "seek redress" against big tobacco or asbestos companies, the researcher explained. A Pennsylvania man was awarded $3.8 million (€3.5 million) from his employer in 2024 for contracting mesothelioma due to asbestos exposure. Climate cases are "no different," she added.
"Big Oil companies are already facing climate fraud and damages lawsuits from dozens of state and local governments," noted Alyssa Johl, vice president of legal and general counsel at the Center for Climate Integrity, a US-based climate think tank.
But as this latest case is "the first filed on behalf of an individual climate victim," she said, it represents "another step toward accountability."
Markey-Towler said prior tort law climate cases — even those in other countries — could be "tangentially relevant" to this claim.
In 2015, a landmark Dutch climate change lawsuit known as the Urgenda case, employed the tort law principle of "hazardous negligence" to argue that government inaction on climate change constituted a breach of its duty of care towards its citizens. The ruling forced the Dutch government to raise emission reduction targets.
A more recent case in Germany where a Peruvian farmer sued energy giant RWE for its contribution to the glacial melt and flood risk posing a danger to his house, was another attempt by an individual to seek climate damages.
"While the case did not succeed at the merits stage, the court acknowledged that, in principle, a private emitter could be held liable for a proportion of the damages," Markey-Towler noted of the final judgement in May.
Peruvian farmer Saul Luciano Lliuya's lost case against RWE still upheld the principle that a fossil company can be be held liable for climate damage Image: Alexander Luna/Germanwatch e.V.
'Attribution science' key in proving responsibility for heatwave
The science of weather attribution, which estimates the probability of climate change making extreme weather events such as wildfires, floods or heatwaves more likely, will "be central to the case," said Tigre.
The 2021 heatwave along the US west coast — dubbed the Pacific Northwest Heat Dome — would have been "virtually impossible" without human-made climate change, according to rapid analysis at the time.
The record temperatures that continued for three days would have been "at least 150 times rarer" without climate change, the research noted.
Estimated to happen only once every 1000 years, such extreme heat would instead occur around every 5 to 10 years if, as predicted, global temperatures rise 2 C (3.6 F) by the early 2040s.
Temperatures soar in Pakistan heat wave
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Heat is called a "silent killer" and caused the deaths of 489,000 people annually between 2000-2019, noted a 2024 UN report. The Pacific Northwest Heat Dome event resulted in around 850 deaths related to high temperatures across the US and Canada.
But Tigre says the problem for Misti Leon's claim against the oil companies will be convincing the court of the defendants' "specific" contributions to global emissions.
"Even if we are able to say that climate change caused an event, how much did one company contribute to this?" asked Markey-Towler. "That's difficult."
A potential 'new wave' of litigation
Nonetheless, she says "health arguments" are becoming common in climate lawsuits, which now number nearly 3,000 in the US and around the world, according to the Climate Change Litigation Database run by the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law in New York.
If the Washington state case is successful, it would establish a landmark precedent "directly connecting the actions of fossil fuel companies to harm suffered by individuals," said Markey-Towler.
Evolving legal theories such as "climate homicide or corporate manslaughter," which take the step of seeking a criminal as opposed to a civil conviction, could be helped by a successful trial, noted Maria Antonia Tigre.
"Such a precedent would likely spark a new wave of litigation," she added.
Edited by: Jennifer Collins

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


DW
a day ago
- DW
Ukraine updates: Russian strike kills 5 in Dnipropetrovsk – DW – 06/27/2025
A Russian missile strike killed five people and wounded 23 others in Ukraine's central Dnipropetrovsk region. Meanwhile, Moscow summoned the German ambassador over the "persecution" of Russian journalists. DW has Russian Foreign Ministry summoned the German ambassador Alexander Graf Lambsdorff to announce retaliatory measures against the "persecution" of Russian journalists working in Germany, Russian state news agencies reported. The dispute began after the head of Russia's state media company in Berlin, Sergei Feoktistov, accused German police of confiscating his family's passports, prompting Moscow to threaten retaliation. According to RIA state news agency, Russia's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman had warned last week that Moscow was preparing countermeasures and urged German correspondents in Moscow to "get ready." Russia has repeatedly accused Western countries of mistreating journalists and imposing restrictions on foreign media. However, Russia itself has blocked access to dozens of Western media outlets and restricted coverage of the war in Ukraine. Deutsche Welle was banned in Russia in 2022, shortly after Moscow began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. A Russian strike in Ukraine's industrial region of Dnipropetrovsk killed five people and injured 23 as Russian forces tried to gain a foothold in the region for the first time in the war. "Three people have been killed in an enemy attack. Fourteen people have been wounded," regional Governor Sergiy Lysak said of the attack on the town of Samar, outside the region's main city Dnipro. He later updated the number of fatalities and spoke of five dead and 23 injured. Russian forces attacked both Dnipro and Samar with missiles earlier this week, killing at least 23 people. Ukrainian military officials said previous Russian attacks near Samar had hit Ukrainian military training facilities. Separately, authorities in the northern Kharkiv region reported that one person was killed and three others injured in Russian attacks. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video We are following the latest developments concerning Russia's war in Ukraine. On Thursday, EU leaders agreed at their summit in Brussles to extend sanctions on Russia for an additional six months and called for even greater efforts to deliver more military support for Ukraine. The leaders also underlined the need to help Kyiv's defense industry, which can manufacture weapons and ammunition more quickly and cheaply than its European counterparts. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was present for the summit via videolink. He urged the European Council to send "a clear political signal" that Brussels supports Kyiv's efforts to join the European Union and repeated his call to crack down on Russian oil revenues. Meanwhile, Russia continues its air strikes on Ukraine and exerts further pressure on the front lines. Stay tuned for more news and analyses.


DW
a day ago
- DW
Japan hangs 'Twitter Killer' in first execution since 2022 – DW – 06/27/2025
Takahiro Shiraishi was executed five years after he was handed the death sentence for brutally killing nine young people. Japan has executed a man convicted of murdering and dismembering nine people, in the country's first use of the death penalty since 2022. Takahiro Shiraishi — dubbed the "Twitter killer" — strangled eight women and one man to death in 2017 after contacting them on social media platform X, formerly Twitter. The victims — aged between 15 and 26 — had posted about having suicidal thoughts. Shiraishi told them he could aid them in their plans or even die alongside them. He was also convicted of sexually abusing female victims. Shiraishi was sentenced to death in 2020. The hanging took place on Friday at the Tokyo Detention House under strict secrecy. No information was disclosed until the execution was completed. Justice Minister Keisuke Suzuki, who authorised Shiraishi's hanging, said he made the decision after careful consideration, taking into account the convict's "extremely selfish" motive for crimes that "caused great shock and unrest to society." Shiraishi's execution comes amid growing calls to abolish capital punishment in Japan, a country where public support for the practice remains overwhelmingly strong. Japan and the United States are the only two major industrialized democracies that still have the death penalty. Capital punishment is carried out by hanging in Japan, with prisoners being notified of their execution hours before it is carried out. Human rights groups criticize the process, saying that it puts stress on death-row prisoners. There are some 100 death row prisoners in the country waiting for their sentence to be carried out. Nearly half of them are seeking retrial, Suzuki told the media on Friday. Japan's last execution took place in July 2022, when a man convicted of a 2008 stabbing rampage in Tokyo's Akihabara district was hanged. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video *Editor's note: If you are suffering from serious emotional strain or suicidal thoughts, do not hesitate to seek professional help. You can find information on where to find such help, no matter where you live in the world, at this website:


DW
2 days ago
- DW
Belarus: Tsikhanouski says his release gives people hope – DW – 06/26/2025
In his first big interview after his release, Belarussian opposition leader Siarhei Tsikhanouski tells DW about the conditions in prison, his wife's transformation and hope for the people of Belarus. One of the most well-known Belarusian political prisoners, blogger Siarhei Tsikhanouski, was released on June 21 following a visit to Belarus by Keith Kellogg, President Trump's special envoy for Ukraine. Tsikhanouski gave his first big interview since being freed to DW's Alexandra Boguslawskaja, who had also interviewed him five years ago in Belarus, shortly before his arrest. Tsikhanouski was detained in May 2020, after being denied registration as a presidential candidate challenging Alexander Lukashenko and later convicted to 18 years in prison. His wife Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya assumed the candidacy and ran for presidency in his stead. She was forced to flee Belarus after Lukashenko claimed victory in an election which observers label as rigged. Tsikhaniuskaya has been living in Vilnius ever since and became the leader of Belarussion democratic opposition in Tsikhanouski: I couldn't believe it. I spent five years in a solitary confinement cell, sometimes it was three square meters, sometimes six, and sometimes even 18. And then, when you finally see open space around you, you're overwhelmed by emotions. The doors of the bus opened and I saw Svetlana. I couldn't believe it and had tears in my eyes. I hugged her and said, "Let's go somewhere.' We found a quiet spot to talk in private. Honestly, even now, I still can't believe it. The emotions were so intense, the tears just kept coming. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 videoThe regime used to imprison people on supposedly non-political charges, things like alleged economic crimes. Since I'm a businessman, I thought they'd give me three or four years on some fake economic charges, and only after the elections. But I never expected to scare them so much by pushing for real change. Once they realized that, they decided to lock me up preemptively, silence and bad-mouth me, and keep me behind not being able to talk to anyone — literally no one. Not hearing a single kind word from anyone because all you ever hear are insults, threats, and negativity from the guards. They try to convince you that you're nobody, that you've been forgotten, that everyone has given up, and no one is fighting for you anymore. But I didn't believe them. I knew that many Belarusians supported me — I had seen that support on the streets with my own eyes. Thinking about my family was hard because I had no information about them. I had the chance to read books, and I read constantly. It helped me take my mind off everything as I waited for the day I'd be freed. I knew that day would of course, it's a metaphor. The US administration has been preparing for the release of Belarusian political prisoners for a few years. The groundwork has been laid — I've heard this partly from diplomats involved in our release and from other sources. The prosecutor visited me in prison last year, during the Biden administration. So the preparations were already underway, but under Donald Trump, this effort really picked up pace. The thing is, Trump was planning to resolve the Ukraine issue quickly, which would lead to lifting sanctions on Russia. Since Belarus and Russia are part of a Union State, if the sanctions on Russia were lifted, the Lukashenko regime would automatically gain full access to all opportunities — so sanctions on Belarus would have to be lifted too. And if that happens, the political prisoners would have to be released as not about Trump personally. It's about the big politics where everything is connected and you can't just solve the issue of Belarussian political prisoners alone. It's definitely an important issue, but it's not as big as the war in Ukraine. That's a nightmare, a tragedy for all of Europe. And I think European officials and diplomats are doing the right thing by ignoring the regime. As long as political prisoners remain behind bars, there should be no dialogue with that time, I was still in pre-trial detention. My lawyers were visiting me, and I had newspaper subscriptions, so I found out right away. I couldn't believe it. I still don't understand how Putin, how the Russians could invade another country under the pretext that some Russians in Ukraine or the Russian language were under threat. If you really believe Russians are being mistreated, then bring them to your country. Build homes for them, give them pensions. Why kill so many people? After that, I stopped receiving any information at all, so I really don't know what's been going on. Now, I'm just beginning to take it all in and try to understand it. But one thing is clear to me: I fully support President Zelenskyy. He's facing an incredibly difficult situation, and we all need to stand behind him — even if he makes a mistake here and I didn't have to get to know her all over again. But honestly, I was surprised at how much she changed. She became such a businesslike woman — she wasn't a business lady before. But now she's so professional and driven. But at home, nothing has really changed. With the kids and with me, it's the same. The only difference is she's just completely exhausted all the not just that it could — it will. Absolutely, it will. And I think very soon you'll see us in many cities in Germany and in other European capitals as well. As for me personally — you'll definitely see me on at all. I asked my wife the same question — and despite everything we've been through, she said she doesn't regret anything either. We couldn't have done it any other way. She had to submit documents as a presidential candidate in my stead. And then she couldn't but fight for me, once her husband was thrown in prison for nothing. She knew I wasn't a criminal — and not fighting wasn't an option.