Landmark legal challenge to stop 17-year long air quality failure gets underway
Lawyers, environmental justice groups and NI’s children’s rights watchdog are in court today, attempting to stop a dangerous 17-year long air quality failing.
Hundreds of thousands of diesel cars in Northern Ireland have never received a legally compliant exhaust emissions test at government-controlled MOT vehicle testing centres. The test was introduced in 2006 but was stopped after four months and it has never been restarted.
The Department for Infrastructure are still not carrying out the legally required exhaust emissions test on any diesel cars in Northern Ireland, over five years after the failure was publicly exposed in a high-profile BBC Spotlight investigation.
Now, Friends of the Earth NI, supported by The Public Interest Litigation Support (PILS) Project, are taking legal proceedings to compel the Department to recommence testing as soon as possible.
During the one-day High Court hearing, their legal team will argue that, in failing to fully test the emissions of diesel cars in Northern Ireland, the Department for Infrastructure has not only breached its duties under vehicle testing law but also its duties to protect public health and the health of Northern Ireland’s biodiversity and wildlife habitats.
Speaking in advance of the judicial review, PILS Director Maria McCloskey said that: “17 straight years of a failure to comply with the law is completely unacceptable. Our hope for this challenge is that the Department will not be permitted to let this serious air quality failing go on any longer. This landmark public interest case is about defending everyone’s right to breathe clean air and eradicating a triple threat to public health, natural habitats and biodiversity.”
The case is a local example of the flourishing global movement to drive environmental action through legal routes. All around the world, communities are increasingly taking to the courts – as well as to the streets – to ensure governments live up to their environmental commitments.
Welcoming the opportunity to have the MOT diesel emissions testing case heard in court, James Orr, Friends of the Earth NI Director, also commented:“The consistent failure to test diesel emissions on cars by government controlled MOT centres, is a reckless act by a Department who are there to protect the air that we breathe. Human health and the health of our environment has been put at risk for the last 17 years by the Department for Infrastructure’s dereliction of duty. We are taking the government to Court because we all have a right to breathe clean air.”
Motivated by its concerns over the harmful effects of these untested emissions, the NI Commissioner for Children and Young People is also intervening in the case.
Northern Ireland Commissioner for Children and Young People, Chris Quinn, said: “It is deplorable that the Department for Infrastructure have not been carrying out their legal obligations for 17 years. NICCY intervened in this case to hold the government to account and to highlight the relevant human right concerns and the serious adverse impact that poor air quality has on children’s health. This milestone case is so important, as these exhaust emissions affect us all, but it particularly affects children and young people, as is borne out by the scientific evidence referred to in this case. It is vitally important that the Department acts urgently to ensure that emissions are adequately tested. It is a basic right for children and young people to be able to breathe clean air.”
The Clean Air NI judicial review is creating legal history in Northern Ireland as one of the first cases to rely on the Climate Change Act 2022 in court.
In another significant development, PILS Project Director Maria McCloskey has assumed the role of instructing solicitor in the case, taking over from Friends of the Earth NI: “This is exactly the sort of scenario that PILS was set up to support. The legal team involved in this case has truly become a community and it’s a huge honour for me to pick up the baton from Friends of the Earth’s brilliant in-house solicitor, Laura Neal.”
#CleanAirNI
📣UPDATE: the #CleanAirNI story isn't over just yet!
One day wasn't quite enough to discuss all the critical issues in our case. So, @foe_ni @PILSni @nichildcom will be back in court on 20 October 2023.
👏Thanks to everyone who has supported us so far.
To be continued… pic.twitter.com/xnyRsDwmdr
— The PILS Project (@PILSni) September 21, 2023