Finland

Finland is a civil law country, thus the legal state does not experience an impact as much due to precedents and case law as in common law countries. With that said, there is case law on climate and environmental law in Finland, though not in the same extent as in some other countries. Also needed to say, that finnish case law's, in all areas not only in climate law, even precedents', analysis and explanations have been criticized of being too superficial and lacking real legal analysis. The analysis itself is usually fairly beneficial but it is lacking a lot of comparative analysis and explanation on why the court reached to the outcome they did and not on another.

Finland as a country, and a European Union member state, takes serious the climate challenges, and climate change we are facing today. The Finnish Innovation Fund Sitra published a study Growth-Positive zero-emissions pathways to 2050 where they proved that the 1.5-degree target, defined in the Paris Agreement, is still possible to accomplish but for more, that stringent climate actions and economic growth are not mutually exclusive. European Union Institutions reached to a historical conclusion on the 21 April 2021, when enacting climate legislation for the first time in EU history. The aim is to cut the greenhouse emissions by at least 55% by the year of 2030, and becoming the first the world's first climate-neutral continent by 2050. Although, some member states have disagreed with the goal, especially Poland, Finland has its own, more ambitious, goal where the Government programme has stated that Finland would be carbon neutral by 2035. However, the fact that European Climate Law has been enacted is a huge step not only recognizing climate change as a real problem but as well set legally binding target of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 which forces not only EU institutions but also member states taking the necessary measures at both, EU and national level to meet the target.

The European Climate Law could enable easier litigation process against a Member State or the European Union itself, if failing to reach the aim of the law, net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. That itself is a huge win for climate litigation in the European level.

Available parties
According to the Finnish Environmental Protection Act § 186 defines the individuals or associations who may initiate the climate proceeding in Finland, including the party concerned, the municipality where the breech has occurred, and an authority protecting the public interest. Legal literature has although recognized that the party concerned may only initiate climate proceedings where the breech causes imminent and judicial impacts on the individual. Thus, in the Supreme Administrative Court decided on KHO 2013:187, that one of the applicants, A, application was insufficient when they weren't a sufferer of the environment hazard. The court argued as well that consequence based on private contracts, does not accomplish to a party of the litigation.

Organizations

 * Greenpeace Finland
 * The Finnish Association for Nature Conservation