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Slideshow: highlights from the 3rd runway campaign

The battle over a 3rd runway for Heathrow became an iconic struggle between those of us who know the climate change threat is deadly serious, and those who preferred to gamble our collective future in search of short-term profit. And when that latter group includes such heavyweights as the Department for Transport and the British Airports Authority, you know you're in for a fight - even when the science is on your side.

In the event it took three years of hard campaigning, and the building of a huge coalition of civil society (including residents' groups Hacan and NoTRAG, local councils, Climate Camp, WWF and RSPB) to bring the runway plans down.

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Campaigners visit Downing Street to thank Cameron and Clegg for runway cancellation

13 May 2010

Airport campaigners headed to Downing Street today to present the new Prime Minister with a legal Deed of Trust containing the names of over 90,000 people who jointly own a plot of land at the centre of the proposed Heathrow runway development, and to thank David Cameron and Nick Clegg for agreeing to officially scrap the planned expansion.

The ‘Airplot' campaign to buy the land and divide up ownership was launched by Emma Thompson and Alistair McGowan last year as a way to thwart airport operator BAA's plans to tarmac over the village of Sipson a mile to the north of Heathrow.

The deeds have now closed, and with 91,000 people signed up as beneficial owners of the land any government which had tried to build the runway would have faced a significant legal headache. Among the owners of the one acre plot are Deputy PM Nick Clegg, dozens of MPs, celebrities, local residents and people from around the world concerned about climate change. David Cameron agreed to have a tree planted on the land in his name.

One of the owners of the land is Good Life actor Richard Briers. He said:

"What great news it was when they said they wouldn't be building their silly runway. Lots of us have been very worried about it, not just because we live in west London but because of the harm it would have done to the environment. There are so many people named on our deed, it's terribly heavy, but when Mr Cameron and Mr Clegg look through it they'll see there are more than ninety thousand people who own our lovely little plot of land in the middle of the new runway site. I'm sure they'll all be very pleased to hear the runway is being officially scrapped."

Greenpeace also revealed today the winner of a high-profile architectural competition to design a fort to be constructed on the plot of land to defend it from the bulldozers if necessary. A panel of judges including Turner prize winner Rachel Whiteread sifted through entries from 67 architects and architectural practices before choosing a design for an intricate tunnel network submerged beneath a purpose-built hill.

Greenpeace had committed to building the fortress and occupying it to peacefully defend the iconic plot if BAA continued to push for the runway. The winning design - by London architects Alastair Parvin and Lukas Barry - is a defendable structure that would be collectively created by the thousands of individuals who opposed the runway plans, each person contributing a sack of earth to build up the fortress. Once built, Greenpeace were planning to keep the design of the tunnel network within the structure a carefully guarded secret.

Other entries included a "Martello hive" - an adventure playground which doubles as an underground complex for activists - and a rubber house made from the thousands of aircraft tyres that are discarded at Heathrow each year.

Pictures of the winning design and other entries can be viewed here: www.greenpeace.org.uk/airplot_winners. (High res versions available from contact number below.)

Commenting on the winning design for a fortress to be built on the land, competition judge Rachel Whiteread OBE said:

"Essentially this is a defensive and very proactive design, but it's also a quietly poetic one too. It's a simple hill - almost like a burial mound which is something we've seen traditionally across England and worldwide. It will be built using these earth bags - which people can even bring from their gardens - and this really excited us, the fact that people will be investing in the structure, and will be involved in the making of it. It's very exciting and is a design which works on so many levels."

The winning architects said: "What really grabbed us about this project was that it was an opportunity to explore a fundamentally different way of making things. Where traditional architecture has always been built by the few to impress upon the many, this would be the opposite: a structure built by the many to impress upon the few. We think it will be the world's first truly 'crowd-funded' structure."

An exhibition of the entries to the competition to design the fortress will be held at the Oxo Bargehouse gallery on London's Southbank from Wednesday 2nd June to Sunday 6th June. Members of the public are invited to view the stunning entries and decide for themselves if the judges got it right.

ENDS

For more call Greenpeace on 020 7865 8255 / 07801 212967

Notes:

  • The campaign against a third runway at Heathrow airport is a frontline in the battle against climate change. A third runway would, if it was used to capacity, double the number of passengers passing through the airport and lead to 202,000 extra planes flying over London every year. Not only does that mean that millions of Londoners' lives would be further blighted by noise and air pollution but also that Heathrow airport would be the biggest single source of carbon dioxide in the UK, bigger than Drax power station. At full capacity, the airport would emit 23.6 million tonnes of CO2 every year - that's equivalent to the emissions of 54 of the least polluting countries combined.
  • Mike Seifert, the solicitor Greenpeace engaged to create as many legal owners of the land as possible. said: "It was a fascinating challenge to structure a land purchase so thousands of people can have a stake, and a voice, in a field. In the end we settled on the idea of people becoming beneficial owners of the land. Having this number of people owning a piece of land collectively is highly unusual and we think may be unprecedented in law."
  • Alastair Parvin and Lukas Barry are architecture graduates and designers working in London. More of their work and writing can be found published at www.bemakeshift.co.uk
  • The winning entries will be shown 2-6 June at the Bargehouse, Oxo Tower Wharf, Bargehouse Street, South Bank, London SE1 9PH, 11am - 6pm daily, admission free. For more information: www.greenpeace.org.uk/oxo
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Heathrow third runway cancelled: we won!

Airplot: handing in the deeds at No 10
Handing in the Airplot deed at No 10 this morning

Fantastic news - climate-wrecking plans for a third runway at Heathrow airport have been axed.

The Cameron/Clegg government confirmed yesterday evening that it will not only scrap the third runway at Heathrow, but also refuse additional runways at Gatwick and Stansted. So all our Airplot campaigning has finally won out - and a huge thank you is due to all you Airplotters, and everyone who's written to their MP or taken part in one of the many protests demanding that the plan be shelved.

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The Airplot Competition: we have a winner!

This morning we're proud to announce the winner of the Airplot Contest - our competition to find the ideal structure to fortify the Airplot so that, if the police come to turf us out, we can peacefully resist them. There were two categories - one for architects and architecture students to come up with some practical solutions for how we can defend the land, and the other open to everyone to let their imaginations off the leash.

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Airplot: Come and see the Heathrow Contest entries

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Get your own bit of earth for Earth Day and help stop the third runway

Thursday's Earth Day and what better way to mark the occasion than by getting your own piece of  earth that will help block the third runway at Heathrow?

Last year we bought a piece of land slap bang in the middle of the proposed site for third runway at Heathrow and we'd like you to join us as a beneficial owner on the deed. We've got to close the deeds by April 30th so this is pretty much your last chance to join. The land is already shared by over 80,000 owners and we need you to help us reach 100,000 by the end of the month.

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Only three weeks to get your piece of Airplot!

Airplot - join the plot

There’s just three weeks left before we finalise the deed of trust for Airplot; the names of all Airplotters will be included, and everyone will be issued with a certificate of beneficial ownership. If you're not signed up yet, now's the time. If you are, then please ask your friends and family to join the plot, along with Greenpeace, Emma Thompson, Alistair McGowan and Zac Goldsmith and 77,500 other people!

By the time the deeds are finalised on May 1st, we aim to have 100,000 airplotters. We need your help to achieve this, so that the next UK government gets the message: that it's answerable to a huge body of people that oppose Heathrow's third runway. Read more »

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Updated: Heathrow Third Runway Slammed by High Court

Heathrow Judicial Review overturns Government Aviation Policy

Campaigners leave the High Court victorious this morning after the result of a judicial review into the planned third runway at Heathrow declared that the plans were 'untenable'.

UPDATED 20 April 2010: Fantastic news! Both the climate and common sense have scored a major victory at the High Court today, where the Government's plans for a 3rd runway at Heathrow have been dealt a huge blow.

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Government's Heathrow Expansion Plans In Tatters As Judge Slams Runway Policy

Councils, green groups and residents celebrate victory and call on Government to scrap third runway
26 Mar 2010

The Government’s Heathrow policy is in tatters this morning after the High Court ruled that ministers' decision to give a green light to the proposed third runway does not hold any weight.  The judge dismissed the Government’s claims to the contrary as ‘untenable in law and common sense’.

If the Government wants to pursue its plans for Heathrow expansion it must now go back to square one and reconsider the entire case for the runway.

The implications of today’s ruling are profound, not just for Heathrow but for airport expansion plans across the UK.  Lord Justice Carnwath ruled that the 2003 Air Transport White Paper – the foundation of expansion plans across the country - is obsolete because it is inconsistent with the Climate Change Act 2008.

The judge expressed real concern over the “hardship caused to the local community by uncertainty” over the third runway. The coalition which brought the successful legal challenge is now calling on the Government to end the uncertainty and scrap the runway plans once and for all.

The judge ruled that:

•    If the Government decides to push ahead with the runway project it must now review the climate change implications of Heathrow expansion, the economic case for a third runway, and the issue of how additional passengers would get to a bigger airport.

•    The Government’s entire aviation policy must now be reviewed to take into account the implications of the 2008 Climate Change Act. The judge found that “the claimants’ submissions add up, in my view, to a powerful demonstration of the potential significance of developments in climate change policy since the 2003 Air Transport White Paper. They are clearly matters which will need to be taken into account under the new Airports National Policy Statement.”(1)

•    On the economic case for Heathrow expansion he would be ‘surprised’ if the recent tripling of the estimated cost to society of emitting carbon did not have ‘a significant effect’ on the economic case for the runway. The judge also said that “it makes no sense to treat the economic case as settled in 2003.”

•    On the issue of surface access he said the claimants’ case – that there is no credible plan in place to transport millions of extra passengers to an expanded Heathrow - was ‘justified’. Significantly, he noted that the Government was “unable to provide a convincing answer” in court when it was pressed about over-crowding on the Piccadilly underground line that would result from construction of a third runway.

The judge is now inviting the Government to sign a legally binding undertaking that it will not base future aviation policy solely on its 2003 white paper. A further court hearing is expected to take place next month to examine the Government's response to the judge's request. At the same hearing the coalition will seek costs and fully expects to recover those costs from the Government.


Cllr Ray Puddifoot speaking on behalf of the local councils said:
“This is a spectacular victory for our residents. The Government had been trying to close down debate on the true economic impact of a third runway by presenting it as a done deal.


“Today’s ruling has blown that position apart. The Government just did not want to have to take on board the real consequences of new climate change laws. The judge made it clear the figures just did not add up.


“If after this ministers are still intent on pressing ahead with expansion they will have to go back to the beginning and justify the whole economic case in public. Knowing what we now know about rising carbon costs this is an argument they cannot win.
“The third runway is effectively dead because it cannot survive the proper economic and environmental scrutiny which the Government tried to avoid. As local councils we call on the Prime Minister to do to the decent thing and bury this discredited policy.”


Geraldine Nicholson, Chair of NoTRAG, said:
“As local residents, we now demand that the Government drops all plans for a 3rd runway and sixth terminal at Heathrow so that we can cast off the 8 years of blight and start to rejuvenate our communities.”

Greenpeace executive director John Sauven said:
“This ruling leaves the Government’s Heathrow decision in tatters. Ministers will now have to go back to the drawing board and conduct a broad consultation on key issues where their case is extremely weak. The third runway was already on life support, but with this ruling it’s hard to even find a pulse. This shows that David Cameron and Nick Clegg backed the right horse when they pledged to scrap the third runway, and it makes any Conservative U-turn after the election all but politically impossible.”

David Nussbaum, CEO of WWF-UK, said:
"We are delighted with today’s judgement. It deals a body blow to the third runway, but more than that it makes it clear that the Government's whole policy of airport expansion must be reviewed in order to bring it into line with the Climate Change Act."

"Today's landmark ruling has implications that could resonate far wider than the aviation sector. For a judge to tell the Government that it cannot build huge pieces of carbon-intensive infrastructure without considering the long-term consequences is a resounding win in the fight to tackle climate change. It is also a further indication of the need for the UK to make a swift transition to a low carbon economy. WWF would now urge the Government to focus on green investment, encouraging alternative ways of connecting with people wherever possible, such as high speed rail and videoconferencing, rather than relying on carbon-heavy methods such as flying.”


Shaun Spiers, Chief Executive of the Campaign to Protect Rural England, said:
"The Government said there could be no argument about the need for a third runway. This was undemocratic and it was wrong.


"We were forced to bring this legal case to give people the right to challenge the expansion of Heathrow. The High Court has now made clear that a fundamental review of aviation policy is needed. This not just a victory for people living around Heathrow or around other airports, it is a victory for everyone who wants a tranquil countryside and a democratic planning system."


HACAN Chair John Stewart said:
“This is an utterly damning verdict for the Government.  It not only raises very serious concerns about a third runway at Heathrow, it also calls into question the Government’s entire aviation policy.  This really could be the final nail in the coffin for a third runway.”

Martin Harper, the RSPB’s Head of Sustainable Development, said:
“Right from the start, we have argued that building a third runway at a time when we are battling to reduce our carbon emissions made no sense.

“Climate change threatens many species with extinction and we are already seeing its impacts with catastrophic declines in seabird numbers in parts of the North Sea.

“Concerns about climate change are at the heart of today’s judgement. The clear message from the High Court is that Government must now take those concerns into account.”

ENDS

Contacts:
For the London councils: Steve Mayner 020 8871 7524 / 07860 481 368/ Emma Marsh 01895 556 064 and 07780913334
For Greenpeace: Ben Stewart - 07801 212 967
For WWF: Jo Sargent - 01483 412375/ 07867 697519
For local residents: John Stewart – 07957 385 650/Geraldine Nicholson – 07710 523369
For Campaign to Protect Rural England: Ralph Smyth – 020 7981 2825/ Jack Neill-Hall 07739 332 796 (out of hours)
For RSPB: John Clare on 01767 680551

NOTES TO EDITORS
1.)    National Policy Statements (NPSs) are a key part of the new planning system that was established by the Planning Act 2008. They are strategic planning documents will set out the  national  need for major infrastructure developments  such as power stations, ports, airports, roads  and transmission lines. When an application is submitted for such a development above a certain threshold, there will be a presumption in favour of granting permission. The Government has said it intends to publish a draft Airports NPS next year.

2.)    Six local authorities in West London (Hammersmith and Fulham, Hounslow, Hillingdon, Richmond upon Thames, Wandsworth and Windsor & Maidenhead) are claimants to the challenge, alongside   the local residents group (NoTRAG) and the national campaigning group against airport expansion HACAN. WWF-UK, Campaign to Protect Rural England and Greenpeace are also claimants. Transport for London is an independent party supporting the claim. The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds is an expert witness. The challenge is also supported by Kensington and Chelsea and the Mayor of London. The local authorities are all members of the 2M Group which comprises 24 local councils opposed to Heathrow expansion with a combined population of 5 million.

3.)    The legal challenge was launched in April 2009 and the case was heard in the High Court at a rolled-up hearing on the 23rd – 25th February 2010.

4.)    In February 2007, Greenpeace won a Judicial Review against the Government’s energy review which backed a new generation of nuclear power stations. As a result the government was forced to re-run the public consultation.

5.)    If a third runway at Heathrow airport were to be built, the airport would become the largest single emitter of carbon dioxide in the UK. Unrestrained airport expansion would make it impossible for the UK to play its part in tackling climate change. The Government has committed the UK to cuts of at least 80% in CO2 emissions by 2050. Research from the respected Tyndall Centre shows that if the industry is allowed to expand as predicted, aviation emissions alone would make it impossible to meet this target.

6.)    Aviation has a number of high-altitude impacts that increase its total warming effect on the climate. The Committee on Climate Change has recently suggested that aviation has a Global Warming Potential of around two, meaning that its total warming effect is twice that of its CO2 emissions alone.

7.)     In December 2009, the Committee on Climate Change published a report with recommendations of how the Government target to reduce aviation emissions to 2005 levels by 2050 could be met. The Committee recommended that aviation growth needs to be limited to around half of that planned in the White Paper, but warned that the target may need to be further tightened in the future.

8.)    All the claimants are represented by Harrison Grant (solicitors) instructing Nigel Pleming QC of 39 Essex Street, Nathalie Lieven QC and David Forsdick of Landmark Chambers.