1.1.
On 2 March 2026, Bacon and Jurjens, on behalf of Greenpeace, requested the court to correct the judgment rendered in this case on 28 January 2026 (hereinafter: the judgment) on two points:
1. In legal consideration 12.2 of the operative part of the judgment, the State is ordered to “within eighteen months after this judgment, in any case incorporate absolute emission reduction targets for the entire economy as referred to in Article 4(1) of the Paris Agreement into national legislation”. Greenpeace argues that it follows from both the considerations of the judgment (including considerations 11.13.1 and 11.13.2) and the respective wordings of Article 4, paragraph 1 and Article 4, paragraph 4 of the Paris Agreement that Article 4 paragraph 4 of the Paris Agreement should have appeared in the operative part, and not paragraph 1. To that extent, according to Greenpeace, there is an obvious clerical error that lends itself to simple correction. Greenpeace requests the court to correct this error pursuant to the provisions of Article 31 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
2. In consideration 11.58 of the judgment, the court rules that the order sought by Greenpeace under VI to establish a national carbon budget within six months cannot be granted. The court subsequently grants the lesser demand, by ordering that the State must provide insight into what the (remaining) emission margin for the Netherlands is. Greenpeace believes that the court attached a period of six months following the judgment to this in the second paragraph of consideration 11.58 by considering that the requested period of six months following this judgment appears reasonable to the court, because, according to the State, the underlying information is already available. In consideration 12.2 of the operative part, the court subsequently orders the State to provide insight into the (remaining) emission margin for the Netherlands. In view of the foregoing, Greenpeace believes that it is clear that the State must comply with this part of the order in consideration 12.2 of the operative part of the judgment within six months following the judgment. Greenpeace notes that if the court had (also) intended to order the State in the operative part to provide insight into the (remaining) emission margin for the Netherlands within six months following this judgment, Article 31 paragraph 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure gives the court scope to correct an obvious clerical error in the judgment ex officio.
1.2.
On 4 March 2026, Brans, on behalf of the State, informed the court that he had no objection to the amendment requested in 1.1 under 1. The State indicated in this regard that it is also his assessment that the court, in consideration 12.2 of the judgment, intended to refer to Article 4 paragraph 4 of the Paris Agreement.
1.3.
The State does, however, object to the amendment requested in 1.1 under 2. Referring to Article 31, paragraph 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the State takes the position that there is no obvious clerical error that lends itself to simple correction. According to the State, this is the case, among other things, because making the (remaining) emission margin for the Netherlands transparent is linked to the reduction targets for the entire economy which, on the basis of legal consideration 12.2, must be established by the State within eighteen months after the judgment. According to the State, adding the six-month timeframe proposed by Greenpeace to legal consideration 12.2 goes further than correcting an obvious clerical error that lends itself to simple correction.