
A landmark climate lawsuit aimed at forcing BMW and Mercedes-Benz to stop selling combustion engine cars by 2030 has failed in Germany’s top civil court, handing the country’s auto industry a consequential legal win at a moment when the future of ICE vehicles remains anything but settled.
The decision, issued by Germany’s Federal Court of Justice in Karlsruhe, does not change the broader trajectory of Europe’s emissions rules. But it does make one thing clear: German courts are not prepared to order automakers to phase out combustion engines earlier than lawmakers have required.
Inside the Climate Case Against BMW and Mercedes-Benz
The suits were brought by three Deutsche Umwelthilfe (DUH) managing directors. The cases against BMW and Mercedes-Benz were heard by the Federal Court of Justice, known in Germany as the Bundesgerichtshof, or BGH, after lower courts in Munich and Stuttgart had already ruled in favor of the automakers.
DUH’s argument was ambitious. The group said that continuing to sell new combustion engine vehicles beyond 2030 would consume too much of the remaining carbon budget and, in effect, shift the burden of emissions cuts onto younger generations, potentially limiting their freedoms. The legal theory leaned heavily on Germany’s landmark 2021 Constitutional Court climate ruling, which found that the state has a duty to protect fundamental freedoms by not pushing disproportionate climate burdens into the future.
That earlier case was a turning point in German climate law and influenced wider European climate litigation debates. DUH tried to extend that logic from the state to private companies, arguing that major automakers should be prevented from continuing business practices that would worsen the climate burden later on.
What Germany’s Top Court Decided
The BGH said no. In dismissing the claims, the court held that private individuals cannot demand that BMW or Mercedes-Benz stop placing new combustion engine passenger cars on the market ahead of the deadlines set by European law. Presiding judge Stephan Seiters of the court’s Sixth Civil Senate said the companies’ conduct did not legally impair the plaintiffs’ rights in a way that would justify the outcome they were seeking.
The court also rejected the idea that there is a judicially enforceable carbon budget for individual companies under the plaintiffs’ theory. That point goes to the heart of the case. DUH had tried to argue that BMW and Mercedes-Benz were effectively using up too much of Germany’s remaining emissions space. The court’s response was that climate legislation and sector targets are matters for lawmakers, not something civil judges can independently reassign to specific manufacturers.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Mars orbiter sees 'butterfly' crater spread its wings on the Red Planet - 2
In the stomach of a mummified wolf pup, scientists find DNA from a woolly rhinoceros - 3
Examination In progress into Abuse of Japanese Government-Supported Advance - 4
Flourishing as a Charitable Pioneer: Individual Encounters in Generosity - 5
What you need to know about Trump accounts as Michael and Susan Dell donate $6 billion to the new early childhood investment program
Factbox-China's crewed lunar programme eyes astronaut landing by 2030
Watch India launch advanced military satellite on rocket's 1st flight since May 2025 failure
Creative Do-It-Yourself Ventures for Each Expertise Level
The most effective method to Refresh the Infotainment Framework in the Volvo XC40
Investigate Something else for Less: Financial plan Travel Objections
Make your choice for the PS5 game that you love playing with companions!
How we came to be: Scientists get first look at the evolution of early complex animals
Green Inflections: A Manual for Inside Plants
New science points to 4 distinct types of autism













