this post was submitted on 28 Jan 2026
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A court on Wednesday ordered the Dutch government to draw up a plan to protect residents on the tiny Caribbean island of Bonaire from the devastating effects of climate change — a sweeping victory for the islanders.

The Hague District Court, in a stunning rebuke of Dutch authorities, also ruled that the government discriminated against the island's 20,000 inhabitants by not taking "timely and appropriate measures" to protect them from climate change before it's too late.

"The island already suffers from flooding due to tropical storms and extreme rainfall, and according to several researchers, this will worsen in the coming years. Even conservative forecasts predict that parts of the island will be underwater by 2050, so in 25 years," Judge Jerzy Luiten told a packed courtroom.

The court gave the Netherlands 18 months to set up a legally binding plan to reduce greenhouse gas ​emissions to net zero by 2050, as agreed in international treaties.

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