Press release: 20 March 2019
Lawyers issue legal risk warning over council air pollution inaction
ClientEarth has written to 38 local authorities in England and Wales warning of the legal risk of inaction on air pollution, as local councils seemingly miss crucial deadlines set by the government to produce air quality plans.
The environmental law organisation, which won three legal cases against the UK government over illegal levels of air pollution across the country, is concerned by the slew of missed deadlines and ineffective measures put forward by local authorities.
The charity, which has not ruled out further legal action to tackle toxic air in towns and cities across the country, says that the lack of meaningful progress on the issue is proof of the government’s flawed approach of passing the buck to ill-equipped local authorities.
ClientEarth lawyer, Katie Nield, said: “We are extremely concerned, given the urgency of the situation, at the glacial progress of action from local authorities. Judging by what they are telling residents, many have missed government deadlines to submit plans and some have consulted on potentially legally compliant action before scaling back proposals and delaying decisions.”
Among the cities ClientEarth has written to is Derby, which has failed to publish its final proposals six months after the original deadline set by ministers of 15 September last year.
Instead of requiring urgent action, the government decided to extend Derby’s deadline to come up with proposals. Its final plans are now due on 26th March but, at the time of writing, the council’s website has no information on the status of the proposals or their content.
Many other authorities, including both Bristol and Manchester, are also yet to publish detailed proposals, months after the original 31 December deadline set by ministers for their final plans.
Nield added: “The courts have been clear that the UK Government is obliged to ensure plans are put in place as soon as can be, but instead ministers seem to be setting deadlines and simply watching them sail past.
“It is now almost a decade since legal limits came into place and they are still being broken in large parts of the country. Every week that goes by without action is another week where people are breathing in harmful air pollution which damages their health. This is particularly true of vulnerable groups like children.
“Aside from the legal situation, this is a moral failure from politicians at all levels. Ultimately, it is the responsibility of the central government to sort this out but local authorities should not be using government inaction as an excuse not to do all they can to protect people from breathing dirty air.”
ClientEarth has also sent the councils a briefing, which outlines councils’ responsibilities and warns that if their final proposals do not satisfy the necessary legal requirements, they will be open to legal challenge.
ENDS
Notes to editors:
ClientEarth has written to the following local authorities:
- Derby City Council
- Leeds City Council
- Birmingham City Council
- Nottingham City Council
- Southampton City Council
- Basildon District Council
- Bath & North East Somerset Council
- Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council
- Bristol City Council
- Bury Metropolitan Borough Council
- Coventry City Council
- Fareham Borough Council
- Gateshead Metropolitan Borough Council
- Guildford Borough Council
- Manchester City Council
- Middlesbrough Borough Council
- New Forest District Council
- Newcastle City Council
- North Tyneside Council
- Rochford District Council
- Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council
- Rushmoor Borough Council
- Salford Metropolitan Borough Council
- Sheffield City Council
- Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council
- Surrey Heath District Council
- Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council
- Trafford Metropolitan Borough Council
- Bolsover District Council
- City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council
- Broxbourne Borough Council
- Leicester City Council
- Liverpool City Council
- Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council
- Portsmouth City Council
- Stoke-on-Trent City Council
- Cardiff City Council
- Caerphilly County Borough Council
About ClientEarth
ClientEarth is a charity that uses the power of the law to protect people and the planet. We are international lawyers finding practical solutions for the world’s biggest environmental challenges. We are fighting climate change, protecting oceans and wildlife, making forest governance stronger, greening energy, making business more responsible and pushing for government transparency. We believe the law is a tool for positive change. From our offices in London, Brussels, Warsaw, Berlin and Beijing, we work on laws throughout their lifetime, from the earliest stages to implementation. And when those laws are broken, we go to court to enforce them.