Tournai, Belgium, 18 March 2026. Just over two years after the launch of the Farmer Case, the Tournai Commercial Court in Tournai has ruled that the legal action against TotalEnergies regarding its climate liability is admissible, despite TotalEnergies’s repeated attempts to prove otherwise.
This is a major breakthrough: the courts have recognised that victims of climate change can bring a legal action in their own country, regardless of where the big polluters responsible for this –such as TotalEnergies– are based.
On the merits of the case, the court has decided to postpone its ruling, therefore pausing its proceedings. It is awaiting the first-instance decision in the ongoing TotalEnergies climate trial in Paris, scheduled for 25 June 2026. The French multinational company was taken to the Paris Judicial Court by Sherpa, Notre Affaire à Tous, France Nature Environnement and the City of Paris for failing to fulfil its duty of vigilance on climate matters.
In March 2024, supported by three NGOs, the farmer Hugues Falys took TotalEnergies to court for its responsibility in the climate crisis. Several events – droughts and heat waves in particular – had a heavy impact on his farming activities. The Farmer Case is the first time a Belgian citizen has sued a multinational corporation for climate harms.
"An important sign of hope"
Outside the courtroom, Hugues Falys, his lawyers, and the NGO representatives hailed this as a first step in the right direction. "The court stated that agriculture is directly affected by the climate crisis, that farmers are victims of it – eight out of ten farmers in Belgium are suffering from climate breakdown. It also stressed that the justice system has a role to play in holding those responsible for this crisis to account. Things are changing," said Hugues Falys.
"This is an important sign of hope," explained Marie Doutrepont, one of the lawyers representing Hugues Falys and the three NGOs. "Indeed, it has been recognised that victims of the climate crisis can take highly polluting companies – which contribute significantly to climate change – to court in their own country, even if that is not where the company is headquartered. This is a landmark ruling."
The court also recognised the parent company’s responsibility for the group’s energy strategy.
"We were expecting a decision today [18 March 2026], but remain confident about the rest of the proceedings; this shows the seriousness with which the Tournai Commercial Court is treating this climate case," concluded the organisations supporting Hugues Falys.
Next steps
The Paris Judicial Court’s decision is expected on 25 June. The Farmer Case team hopes that the Tournai Commercial Court will be able to rule shortly after.
"We salute Mr. Falys and the organisations in the Farmer Case for their determined fight for climate justice. We hope that the final decision will recognise the need for corporate accountability to be a cornerstone of the transition away from fossil fuels," said Alexis Deswaef, President of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) and former President of the Ligue des droits humains.
Note to editors: The case was filed under FIDH’s #SeeYouInCourt project, which aims to use strategic litigation to hold companies accountable for their human rights and environmental abuses. FIDH contributed support alongside its member organisation Ligue des droits humains.