Title:
Greenpeace v. Ministry of Energy and Others (on the Energy Sector Program 2020 and Electric Industry Law)
Party:
Mexico
Region:
Latin America and the Caribbean
Date of text:
March 01, 2021
Data source:
Sabin Center
Court name:
District Court
Reference number:
Amparo 135/2021
Abstract:
Greenpeace challenged the constitutionality of the amendments to the Electric Industry Act and the National Electricity Sector Development Program 2020-2034 (PRODESEN). In its suit, Greenpeace also asked for a stay of the implementation of both regulations. Plaintiff argued that the regulations displace the use of renewable energy sources in electricity generation in favor of polluting, fossil fuel sources. This transgresses Mexico’s international commitments on climate change.
The First District Court in Administrative Matters Specialized in Antitrust, Broadcasting and Telecommunications granted a stay of the implementation of both the Act and PRODESEN. The court agreed with the plaintiffs in considering that the regulation could potentially transgress the right to a healthy environment by stalling the energy transition.
The stay was appealed by the authorities. On September 1, 2022, the First Circuit Court in Administrative Matters Specialized in Antitrust, Broadcasting and Telecommunications overturned the district court’s decision, denying the stay. The court argued that the potential harms that could derive from the challenged regulations were conditioned by the need to modify and amend other regulations. In this sense, the harm was not sufficiently immediate to grant the stay.
Key environmental legal questions:
Whether the amendments to the Electric Industry Act and PRODESEN transgress the right to a healthy environment.
Notes:
Just transition; Suits against governments; GHG emissions reduction and trading; Other