Kathleen O'Donnell says the Australian Office of Financial Management and Treasury are deceiving investors by not disclosing climate change alongside other financial risks in its exchange-traded debt
The Australian government is defending a class-action lawsuit that claims it’s misleading investors by failing to disclose the impact of climate risk in its bonds.
Amid a growing wave of
climate litigation worldwide, 23-year-old law student Kathleen O’Donnell says
the Australian Office of Financial Management and the Treasury are deceiving
investors by not disclosing climate
change alongside other financial risks in its exchange-traded debt. She
wants all marketing halted until the disclosures are made.
In the first hearing at the
Federal Court in Melbourne on Tuesday, the case was adjourned after Justice
Bernard Murphy ordered O’Donnell’s lawyers to detail the harm caused and fix
technical issues in relation to the class action. The case will return to court
in mid-2021.
The lawsuit comes as debt
investors globally grapple with assessing the long-term effects of rising world
temperatures and how much economic growth must be sacrificed for countries to
adapt. Sweden’s central bank last year ditched its holdings of debt issued by
Western Australia and Queensland -- states that account for a chunk of Australia’s
fossil fuel exports -- amid increased concern about the threats posed by
climate change.
“The concept that any debt
issuance should consider and disclose the suite of material financial risks is
not a novel one,” said Sarah Barker, head of climate risk governance at law
firm Minter Ellison. “What is novel about that claim is that it is the first
time that it has been litigated in a climate risk context.”
The Australian Office of
Financial Management and Treasury declined to comment on the lawsuit.
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