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Environment lawyer fined £5k for contempt in Heathrow case

Last modified on Mon 10 May 2021 12.13 EDT Environmental lawyer Tim Crosland has been fined £5,000 for criminal contempt of court after deliberately making public a supreme court ruling related to Heathrow airport before the result was officially announced. The judges could have jailed him for two years. The supreme court had ruled that a planned third runway at Heathrow was legal. The runway is highly controversial, with opponents arguing that the increased carbon dioxide emissions it would cause are incompatible with the UK’s obligations to fight the climate crisis. In Monday’s contempt hearing, Crosland argued his deliberate breach was a reasonable measure to prevent harm from climate change, but the judges said there was “no such thing as a justifiable contempt of court”. Before the hearing, Crosland had said: “If fighting for my children’s lives makes me a criminal, then so be it.”

Cumbria coal mine s approval labelled as contemptuous for the future by climate scientist

Cumbria Coal Mine ONE of the UK’s most prominent climate scientists has described the government’s decision not to stop the Cumbrian coal mine as ‘absolutely ridiculous.” Professor Sir Robert Watson has voiced his objections to the mine near Whitehaven at time of growing pressure from campaigners against its approval. Prof Sir Watson’s remarks come after Prof James Hansen, a respected climate scientist, formerly at NASA, wrote to PM Boris Johnson urging him to stop the project. PRESSURE: Climate activists have tried to prevent the mine s approval through months of protests He argued that allowing it to go ahead would lead to “ignominy and humiliation” for the government and the UK, and would be “in contemptuous disregard of the future.

Coalmine plans in Cumbria and a false dilemma | Fossil fuels

The debate over the planned Cumbrian coalmine creates a false dichotomy between prosperity and climate protection, writes Tim Crosland, while Whitehaven, Cumbria, near the site of the proposed Woodhouse Colliery. Photograph: incamerastock/Alamy Whitehaven, Cumbria, near the site of the proposed Woodhouse Colliery. Photograph: incamerastock/Alamy Letters Sun 7 Feb 2021 12.56 EST Last modified on Mon 8 Feb 2021 00.22 EST Gaby Hinsliff’s piece (Plans for a Cumbrian coalmine illustrate the Tory dilemma: green policies or jobs?, 4 February), propagates an illusion advanced principally by vested fossil fuel interests: that we have to choose between green policies or jobs. In reality, no such dilemma exists.

Plans for a Cumbrian coalmine illustrate the Tory dilemma: green policies or jobs? | Environment

This article is more than 1 month old Ministers’ refusal to stop a mine being dug in a marginal seat shows a tension between the environment and ‘levelling up’ Illustration: Nate Kitch/The Guardian Illustration: Nate Kitch/The Guardian Thu 4 Feb 2021 12.57 EST Last modified on Fri 5 Feb 2021 13.25 EST Something is stirring deep beneath the earth. Or rather, someone. The veteran eco- warrior Daniel “Swampy” Hooper, alongside his teenage son, the daughter of a Scottish laird raised on an off-grid island and an undisclosed number of other protesters have spent weeks secretly excavating a honeycomb of underground tunnels beneath Euston Square Gardens in north London. Now they’re refusing to leave their muddy burrows in protest at the building of the HS2 high-speed train route, due to terminate nearby.

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