Bill Text: NY A00072 | 2025-2026 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Creates climate liability for fossil fuel related activity which caused or contributed to climate change; creates a right of action.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 9-0)

Status: (Introduced) 2025-01-08 - referred to environmental conservation [A00072 Detail]

Download: New_York-2025-A00072-Introduced.html



                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________

                                           72

                               2025-2026 Regular Sessions

                   IN ASSEMBLY

                                       (Prefiled)

                                     January 8, 2025
                                       ___________

        Introduced  by  M.  of  A.  SOLAGES, GALLAGHER, EPSTEIN, RAGA, SHRESTHA,
          DE LOS SANTOS, COLTON, REYES -- read once and referred to the  Commit-
          tee on Environmental Conservation

        AN  ACT  to  amend  the  general  business  law, in relation to creating
          climate liability for dangers to safety and health caused  by  certain
          fossil fuel related activities

          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:

     1    Section 1. The legislature finds that the consequences of  a  changing
     2  climate  directly  impact  New York state. Around the world thousands of
     3  scientific studies have documented changes  in  air  and  water  temper-
     4  atures,  melting  glaciers,  diminishing  snow cover, shrinking sea ice,
     5  rising sea levels, ocean acidification, and increasing atmospheric water
     6  vapor.   Warming trends  and  incidences  of  intense  heat  waves  will
     7  contribute  to  greater  localized  heat stresses; heavy rainfall events
     8  that  exacerbate  localized  flooding  will  continue  to  impact   food
     9  production,  natural ecosystems, and water resources; and sea-level rise
    10  will increasingly threaten sensitive coastal communities and ecosystems.
    11  Climate change is adversely affecting New  York's  economic  well-being,
    12  public health, natural resources, and environment.
    13    To   achieve  the  goals  of  the  Climate  Leadership  and  Community
    14  Protection Act (hereinafter the "Climate Act") that include 70%  renewa-
    15  ble  electricity  by 2030, 100% zero-emission electricity by 2040, a 40%
    16  reduction in statewide GHG emissions from 1990 levels by  2030,  an  85%
    17  reduction  in  statewide GHG emissions from 1990 levels by 2050, and net
    18  zero emissions statewide by 2050, the  New  York  State  Climate  Action
    19  Council  (the  "Council") determined in its Scoping Plan for the Climate
    20  Act that "it is imperative  that  New  York  take  immediate  action  to
    21  aggressively  reduce GHG emissions as well as invest in resiliency meas-
    22  ures." Although the plan is not  authoritative  on  the  full  scope  of

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD00312-01-5

        A. 72                               2

     1  damage,  the cost of not taking immediate and aggressive action, accord-
     2  ing to the Council, is approximately $115 billion dollars.
     3    The  public health impacts of GHG and co-pollutant emissions are simi-
     4  larly devastating. Increased heat  stress  (such  as  heat  edema,  heat
     5  stroke, heat cramps, heat stress, and dehydration) and other heat-relat-
     6  ed  morbidity  and  mortality;  exacerbation  of  respiratory conditions
     7  (including pneumonia, asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease)
     8  and cardiovascular disease; increased duration and severity  of  allergy
     9  symptoms  due  to  increased  duration  and  intensity of pollen season;
    10  increased risk for vector-borne diseases (such  as  Lyme  disease,  West
    11  Nile  virus,  and  other  pathogens); increased risk of injury and death
    12  following extreme precipitation events  and  flooding  (or,  conversely,
    13  after  droughts);  rising  sea  levels that threaten infrastructure; the
    14  saltwater intrusion of the  State's  groundwater  resources  (which  may
    15  impact  drinking  water  supplies); and poor indoor air quality (such as
    16  mold and  moisture)  are  just  some  of  those  impacts.  Additionally,
    17  climate-driven  impacts  are magnified in New York's historically margi-
    18  nalized communities that have been disproportionately  affected  by  and
    19  are on the front lines of climate change.
    20    The  legislature finds that the New York Constitution grants every New
    21  Yorker the right to mitigate these impacts.   Article I, Section  19  of
    22  the  New  York State Constitution reads: "Each person shall have a right
    23  to clean air and water, and  a  healthful  environment."  Overwhelmingly
    24  approved  by the voters in 2021, this "green amendment" to our constitu-
    25  tion placed a right to a healthful environment alongside the freedom  of
    26  speech,  religion,  and  property in our Bill of Rights.  As such, every
    27  New Yorker should have the tools to best utilize that right.  This  bill
    28  seeks to provide them with at least one tool.
    29    The  legislature also finds that there has been a scientific consensus
    30  for several decades that climate change is occurring exemplified by  the
    31  testimony  of  Dr.  James  Hansen  of the National Aeronautics and Space
    32  Administration in June 1988 to the U.S. Senate and the  formation  later
    33  that  year  of  the  United  Nations  Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
    34  Change.
    35    The legislature further finds that the fossil fuel industry has  known
    36  for decades that their products overwhelmingly contributed to and accel-
    37  erated climate change, yet they have - and continue to -  lie about this
    38  fact  to  the public. Documents unveiled by litigation and investigative
    39  journalists demonstrate that as early as the 1950s, the industry  became
    40  aware of the potentially catastrophic impact of its products and even in
    41  the  face  of  scientific  consensus  shortly  thereafter  and  research
    42  conducted by their own scientists affirming the impacts of  their  busi-
    43  ness,  the industry outright denied that climate change was real, spread
    44  disinformation to cast doubt on the science, dismissed regulatory action
    45  as insufficient (after no longer  being  able  to  deny  climate  change
    46  outright),  and  currently  advertise "green" efforts to the public that
    47  mask the industry's lack of real investment in  resiliency  and  energy-
    48  source  transition. A December 2022 report by the Oversight Committee in
    49  Congress also revealed internal documents from  senior  leaders  in  the
    50  industry  where,  among  other  things,  they  explicitly  reject taking
    51  accountability for the emissions of their products.
    52    By conduct and impact, the industry has intentionally  obfuscated  the
    53  truth  about climate change and outright deceived the public in order to
    54  continue dependence on their products. The legislature finds  that  this
    55  conduct and the subsequent impact on the public is not political speech,
    56  but  fundamentally commercial activity with incidental political impact.

        A. 72                               3

     1  We also find this conduct to be a substantial factor  in  affecting  the
     2  public's  perception of the threat of climate change, scientific consen-
     3  sus notwithstanding.
     4    New  Yorkers  should  have  the  ability to hold those responsible for
     5  climate change accountable for their deceptive practices and  the  cata-
     6  clysmic impacts these practices have yielded. This bill seeks to provide
     7  them with that opportunity.
     8    §  2. The general business law is amended by adding a new article 20-B
     9  to read as follows:
    10                                ARTICLE 20-B
    11                        FOSSIL FUEL RELATED ACTIVITIES
    12  Section 328.   Definitions.
    13          328-a. Fossil fuel industry member climate liability.
    14          328-b. Defense to liability.
    15          328-c. Right of action.
    16    § 328. Definitions. For purposes of this article, the following  terms
    17  shall have the following meanings:
    18    1. "Covered period" shall mean the period from January first, nineteen
    19  eighty-nine to the effective date of this article.
    20    2.  "Fossil  fuel  industry  member"  shall  mean a firm, corporation,
    21  company, partnership, society, joint stock company or any  other  entity
    22  or association that emitted or caused to be emitted through the extract-
    23  ing,  storing,  transporting, refining, importing, exporting, producing,
    24  manufacturing, distributing, compounding,  marketing,  or  offering  for
    25  wholesale  or retail sale, a qualified product with total greenhouse gas
    26  emissions of at least one billion metric tons of carbon  dioxide  equiv-
    27  alent  during the covered period. It shall not include any public utili-
    28  ty, public authority, or the state of New York or its political subdivi-
    29  sions.
    30    3. "Qualified product" shall mean a fossil fuel product including, but
    31  not limited to:
    32    (a) crude petroleum oil and  all  other  hydrocarbons,  regardless  of
    33  gravity,  that  are  produced at the wellhead in liquid form by ordinary
    34  production methods.
    35    (b) natural, manufactured, mixed, and byproduct hydrocarbon gas.
    36    (c) refined crude oil, crude  tops,  topped  crude,  processed  crude,
    37  processed crude petroleum, residue from crude petroleum, cracking stock,
    38  uncracked  fuel  oil,  fuel  oil,  treated crude oil, residuum, gas oil,
    39  casinghead gasoline, natural-gas gasoline, kerosene, benzine, wash  oil,
    40  waste  oil, blended gasoline, lubricating oil, and blends or mixtures of
    41  oil with one or more liquid products or byproducts derived from  oil  or
    42  gas.
    43    (d)  any  physical  waste generated in the extracting, storing, trans-
    44  porting, refining, importing, producing, manufacturing, distributing, or
    45  compounding a qualified product defined in paragraphs (a),  (b),  and/or
    46  (c)  of this subdivision which contains or is contaminated by any quali-
    47  fied product defined in paragraphs (a), (b), and/or (c) of this subdivi-
    48  sion or any substance appearing on a list within regulations promulgated
    49  by the department of  environmental  conservation  pursuant  to  section
    50  37-0101 of the environmental conservation law.
    51    4.  "Reasonable  controls  and  procedures"  shall  mean policies that
    52  include, but are not limited to: (a) instituting business  practices  to
    53  prevent  pollution,  including  but not limited to the release of green-
    54  house gases which contribute  to  climate  change  and  emissions  which
    55  contribute  to adverse health impacts; and (b) preventing deceptive acts
    56  and practices and false advertising and  otherwise  ensuring  compliance

        A. 72                               4

     1  with  all  provisions  of  article twenty-two-A of this chapter. Acts or
     2  practices related to environmental commitment, performance, or sustaina-
     3  bility shall also be subject to this subdivision  and  shall  be  clear,
     4  objective, and verifiable. The net impression of such acts and practices
     5  shall  not  mislead  a  reasonable person about the fossil fuel industry
     6  member's environmental commitment, performance, or sustainability.  This
     7  subdivision may not be construed to impose liability on  any  speech  or
     8  conduct  protected by the first amendment of the United States Constitu-
     9  tion, as made applicable to the states through the United States Supreme
    10  Court's interpretation of the fourteenth amendment of the United  States
    11  Constitution.
    12    5.  "Deceptive  acts or practices" shall mean those acts and practices
    13  which are unlawful pursuant to article twenty-two-A of this chapter.
    14    6. "False advertising" shall have the same meaning as defined in arti-
    15  cle twenty-two-A of this chapter.
    16    § 328-a. Fossil fuel industry member  climate  liability.  Any  fossil
    17  fuel  industry member whose conduct has caused or contributed to climate
    18  change in New York state,  whether  directly  or  indirectly,  shall  be
    19  liable for damages under this article.
    20    §  328-b.  Defense  to liability. Any fossil fuel industry member that
    21  establishes and implements reasonable controls and procedures may  offer
    22  evidence of those controls and procedures to limit the liability imposed
    23  under  section  three  hundred twenty-eight-a of this article; provided,
    24  however, such evidence shall not be a  complete  defense  to  liability.
    25  When determining the impact of such controls and procedures as a defense
    26  to  liability,  a court may consider the duration that such controls and
    27  procedures are in place in relation to the duration of  the  conduct  in
    28  violation of section three hundred twenty-eight-a of this article or any
    29  other  means  of  measuring  the  mitigating effects of any controls and
    30  procedures relative to the complete impact of the underlying conduct.
    31    § 328-c. Right of action. Any person, government entity, firm,  corpo-
    32  ration or association that has been damaged as a result of a fossil fuel
    33  industry  member's conduct as described in section three hundred twenty-
    34  eight-a of this article shall be entitled to bring an action for  recov-
    35  ery of damages in:
    36    1.  the  county  in  which  all or a substantial part of the events or
    37  omissions giving rise to the claim occurred;
    38    2. the county of residence for any one of the natural  person  defend-
    39  ants at the time the cause of action accrued;
    40    3.  the county of the principal office in this state of any one of the
    41  defendants that is not a natural person; or
    42    4. the county of residence for any plaintiff if  the  plaintiff  is  a
    43  natural person residing in this state.
    44    §  3.  Severability.  If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision,
    45  section or part of this act shall be adjudged by any court of  competent
    46  jurisdiction  to  be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, impair, or
    47  invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall be confined in its operation
    48  to the clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section or part thereof
    49  directly involved in the controversy in which such judgment  shall  have
    50  been rendered. It is hereby declared to be the intent of the legislature
    51  that  this  act  would have been enacted even if such invalid provisions
    52  had not been included herein.
    53    § 4. This act shall take effect immediately.
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