Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Lawsuits filed against Calgary based company unsurprising, expert says

Doug Suttles, the new CEO of Encana Corp., speaks to reporters in Calgary, Alta., Tuesday, June 11, 2013. A Canadian energy company is named in three massive lawsuits that attempt to link damages suffered from climate change to industry's attempts to slow action on the issue. Calgary-based Encana is among 20 international energy majors and their subsidiaries that face claims from three California communities. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh.

A legal expert isn’t surprised Calgary based Encana Corp. was hit with three massive lawsuits this week.

Story continues below advertisement

The suits, filed by three California communities, name 20 energy companies and their subsidiaries and allege they tried to hinder action to address climate change.

The suits allege the companies are at least partially responsible for damages caused by climate change like shoreline erosion, claiming they deliberately spread misinformation and doubt on climate change.

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

Martin Olszynski, an assistant law professor at the University of Calgary, told the Alberta Morning News on Sunday, just like with tobacco, we’re not always aware of the risks associated with something at first.

“They become very broadly used and it’s only after a matter of time that we start to realize that there are maybe some problems. So the question then becomes what is the responsibility of the manufacturers, the various companies that are engaged in that activity to bring those risks to the forefront at least so that consumers are fully engaged?”

He said while both sides know these won’t be easy cases, it could be considered a win for the plaintiffs if the companies make even little changes.

Story continues below advertisement

“That it brings these companies to the table in a bit more of a pro-active way and has them thinking very seriously about their business activities or their business plans, about their future plans.”

The lawsuits draw on legal precedents used against tobacco companies in the 1990s.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article