“Holcim says it’s the wrong stage for the wrong play. Funny, because the planet they’re burning down isn’t exactly Broadway.”
-Adaptation-Guide
Indonesians seeking climate justice take aim at Swiss concrete giant to save their island
Holcim on Trial: Can Four Islanders Bring Down a Cement Giant?
Zug, Switzerland — Picture this: Instead of sitting under the rustling mangroves of their tiny Indonesian island, four residents of Pari find themselves thousands of miles away, staring up at the marble walls and crucifix in a courtroom in Zug, Switzerland.
Their mission? To hold one of the world’s largest cement producers, Holcim, accountable for its role in climate chaos.
Yes, this is real. Four people from an island that’s drowning—literally—are suing a $33-billion Swiss corporation for climate damages.
And the case has rattled Switzerland so hard that the hearing had to be moved to the government building because of the sheer number of media and spectators who showed up.
This is not just a legal case. It’s a David vs. Goliath battle with the planet at stake.
And the contrast could not be sharper: a handful of villagers in flip-flops facing down a corporation with armies of lawyers, PR machines, and an entire fossil-friendly economic system behind it.
What’s the Fight About?
Holcim, like every cement producer on Earth, runs on carbon. Cement production is one of the dirtiest industries in the world, responsible for roughly 7-8% of global CO₂ emissions—more than the entire aviation industry.
And while Holcim has been cashing in on building the world, the seas have been swallowing Pari Island meter by meter.
The plaintiffs, supported by three NGOs (including the Swiss Protestant aid organization HEKS), are demanding two things:
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Compensation for damages already caused
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Binding targets for emission cuts that go far beyond Holcim’s current greenwashed plans
Sounds reasonable, right? Not if you’re Holcim.
Holcim’s Defense: “Wrong Clothes, Wrong Stage”
Holcim’s lead attorney, Felix Dasser, didn’t mince words. He called the lawsuit “a show” and said the courtroom was the “wrong stage for the wrong play.” His metaphor? Four “random Davids” versus one “random Goliath.”
Translation: Don’t blame us, blame the system.
Holcim argues that climate policy is the job of politicians, not courts.
That this fight belongs in the realm of public law, not civil law. That a few islanders can’t represent an entire island. That if judges start imposing emissions targets, it would be judicial overreach.
But here’s the problem: Politicians have failed. Repeatedly. Disastrously.
If courts won’t step in, then who will? Certainly not the corporations profiting off the chaos.
The Stakes: Billions in Profits vs. An Island Underwater
For Holcim, this case is an annoyance. For Pari’s people, it’s survival.
Sea levels are rising. Flooding is routine. Livelihoods are collapsing. And here’s the kicker: the plaintiffs are asking Holcim for CHF 14,400 (about $16,000)—most of it for building mangrove barriers and flood defenses.
You read that right: $16,000 from a company worth billions. And for actual damages? Four Swiss francs. Yes, the lawyers for Holcim pulled four coins out of their pockets, slapped them on the podium, and said, Here, paid.
That’s not just arrogance. That’s contempt. That’s a corporation saying, Your home, your life, your future are worth less than a cup of coffee in Zurich.
Why This Case Terrifies Big Business
Holcim wants this case dead before it even starts because they know what’s coming.
Precedent. In 2021, a Dutch court forced Shell to slash emissions by 45% by 2030. That ruling shook boardrooms worldwide—until an appeals court overturned it last year.
But the point remains: courts can, and will, make corporations bleed for climate crimes.
That’s why this fight in Zug matters. If four villagers from Pari can drag Holcim into a courtroom in Switzerland, what’s stopping millions of climate refugees from doing the same?
And that’s exactly why corporate lobbyists, trade associations, and billionaire-friendly politicians are watching this case like hawks. Because if the judges let it proceed, it’s game on.
The Bigger Picture: Desperation vs. Power
This is more than a lawsuit. It’s an indictment of a broken system where:
✔ Corporations privatize profits and socialize destruction
✔ Politicians draft empty pledges while lobbyists write the real laws
✔ The vulnerable are forced to sue the powerful to stay alive
Four people are going up against an empire of lawyers and lobbyists because no one else will protect them.
That’s not justice—that’s desperation.
What Happens Next?
The Zug judges will decide whether the case moves forward. No timeline yet. If they allow it, Holcim will be the first Swiss company to face a climate liability trial at home.
If they kill it, it sends a clear message: Swiss courts are open for business, closed for justice.
But make no mistake: even if Holcim wins this round, the floodgates are open.
From Pari to Peru, from Shell to RWE, climate lawsuits are multiplying. This isn’t a trend. It’s the future.
So Ask Yourself This:
When the seas rise and the storms hit, who will pay?
The billion-dollar corporations that fueled the crisis—or the people drowning because of it?
Holcim thinks it’s a joke. Four francs on a podium.
But for the rest of us, this is the frontline of climate justice.
And the world is watching.
yours truly,
Adaptation-Guide
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