Ioane Teitiota, from the South Pacific island nation of Kiribati, had hoped to become the world's first climate change refugee. His low-lying homeland is likely to be engulfed by waves by the end of this century - and to become uninhabitable long before then.
But the Court of Appeal in New Zealand, where Mr Teitioa, 37, has been living since 2007, took an old-fashioned view of what constitutes a refugee. In a ruling yesterday, it called his case "fundamentally misconceived", and an attempt to "stand the [UN refugee] convention on its head".
The decision means Mr Teitioa and his family will be deported, as his work visa expired in 2010. Mr Teitioa was a subsistence farmer and fisherman in Kiribati, a string of 33 coral atolls, and he argued he faced passive persecution if forced to return home, as the government there was unable to protect him from climate changes effects.
Rejecting his submissions, the Court of Appeal called them "novel" but "unconvincing", and noted that millions of other people in low-lying countries were in a similar situation.
It added that while Mr Teitioas economic prospects might be better in New Zealand, "his position does not appear to be different from that of any other Kiribati national".