Environment

The cost of delay: public authority and climate redress

By

Marcus Ellison

8

min read

Published on

15 May 2025

Edited on

29 May 2025

European Parliament hemicycle during a plenary session on digital regulation, Strasbourg, March 2024

Table of contents:

Why responsibility still feels abstract

Delay in climate governance is usually framed as a policy slowdown. In reality it is a redistributive act: it shifts costs, harms and political exposure onto actors with less room to absorb them.

In public affairs, that gap matters. Businesses may accept that climate harms exist, and regulators may accept that mitigation is urgent, yet neither side always knows who should remedy which harm, under what standard, and through which institutional channel. The result is predictable: strong rhetoric, weak implementation.

From moral intuition to operational criteria

A workable framework starts by separating three questions: who contributed to the harm, who has the capacity to respond, and who holds the institutional authority to act. Those questions do not always point to the same actor. That is precisely why many climate debates stall.

“The policy problem is not a shortage of principles. It is a shortage of assignable duties.”

Three tests for applicability

  • Causation: can the actor be credibly linked to the relevant harm or risk pathway?
  • Capacity: does the actor have financial, technical or governance means to contribute to a remedy?
  • Legitimacy: would the remedial obligation be publicly defensible and institutionally enforceable?

What this means for policy design

When those tests are used together, remedial responsibilities become less symbolic and more usable. Governments can distinguish between baseline compliance obligations and additional responsibilities tied to transition support, disclosure, adaptation funding or local remediation. Firms, meanwhile, gain a clearer line of sight between risk exposure and strategic response.

A practical route for institutions and companies

Policy-makers should avoid one-size-fits-all remedies. Heavy emitters, strategic investors, infrastructure operators and permitting authorities occupy different positions in the chain of responsibility. The aim is not to blur those distinctions but to make them explicit.

For companies, the implication is straightforward: climate positioning can no longer sit only in sustainability communications. It has to be translated into governance, public commitments and engagement plans that anticipate scrutiny from regulators, civil society and affected communities.

Questions leaders should ask now

  • Which climate-related harms are most plausibly connected to our operations, value chain or financing activity?
  • Where do we have the greatest capacity to support a remedy or accelerate resilience?
  • Which commitments are credible enough to survive legal, political and reputational challenge?

A serious public-affairs strategy does not promise to solve the climate question in one gesture. It does something harder: it makes responsibility applicable, visible and defensible before the pressure becomes unavoidable.

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