Appeal comes one year after co-claimant was left homeless due to coastal erosion
The decision to appeal comes as one of the co-claimants – Kevin Jordan – prepares to mark the first anniversary of his Norfolk home being demolished (on 9 December) as a result of coastal erosion
Friends of the Earth and two co-claimants are appealing against the High Court’s decision in October to reject their legal challenge over the government’s inadequate climate adaptation plans.
The decision to appeal comes as one of the co-claimants – Kevin Jordan – prepares to mark the first anniversary of his Norfolk home being demolished (on 9 December) as a result of coastal erosion [2].
As Storm Darragh battered the UK with 80mph winds recently, there are fears that the fragile Hemsby coastline could face further erosion due to the severe weather forecasted [3].
Friends of the Earth is launching the appeal alongside two people whose lives have already been severely impacted by the climate crisis:
• Kevin Jordan, whose home in Hemsby, Norfolk was demolished in December 2023 after coastal erosion, fuelled by sea level rise and severe storms caused by climate change, left it in danger of falling into the sea.
• Disability activist Doug Paulley, who has a number of health conditions which are being exacerbated by searing summer temperatures. He's concerned that the government’s current adaptation plans fail to consider the needs of disabled people – particularly in places such as care homes – putting him and others at risk.
Friends of the Earth and the co-claimants argued that the current National Adaptation Programme (NAP), introduced by the previous government in July 2023, falls far short of what's legally required, with marginalised groups – such as older and disabled people – and those living in areas most exposed to rising global temperatures, disproportionately affected by the impacts of extreme weather and a deficient national adaptation programme.
Friends of the Earth is appealing on the grounds that the judge was wrong to conclude that non-specific and unmeasurable adaptation objectives could be lawfully set under the Climate Change Act, and that an assessment of the risk that the policies and plans would fail to deliver their intended impact, was not legally required.
The co-claimants also maintain that their human rights have been breached in the making of the plan – not least due to the lack of efficacy in the programme but also due to the failure to include marginalised groups - such as disabled people - in the decision-making process.
The court is not expected to make a decision on whether to allow the appeal for two-three months.
As the climate crisis escalates, the effects are increasingly being felt by communities across the country, such as those still dealing with the aftermath of Storm Bert that hit in late November, which left some disabled and elderly people in Wales struggling to get bottled water following fears that tap water may have been contaminated [4].
Kevin Jordan said:
“As the anniversary of my home being lost to coastal erosion approaches it is heart-breaking to see more homes on the Hemsby coastline under threat from Storms
“Climate change is fuelling this crisis. When I bought my home 15 years ago, I was advised it would be safe for decades to come.
“The government’s climate adaptation plan is seriously inadequate, and unless it is massively improved communities across the country will be at risk from our rapidly changing weather.
“I hope this appeal succeeds and forces the government to give better protection to the hundreds of thousands of homes in England currently at risk of coastal flooding and erosion.”
Doug Paulley said:
“The current National Adaptation Programme is not fit for purpose as it fails to protect disabled people from the impacts of climate change.
“I am delighted that we are appealing against the High Court ruling earlier this year. We need an adaptation plan that better protects us all – especially those most at risk and whose lives are disproportionally affected by our rapidly changing climate”
Friends of the Earths head of legal, Will Rundle, said:
“We maintain that the government’s climate adaptation plan is unlawful and believe there are serious errors in the High Court ruling.
“The UK is woefully iIl-prepared for the escalating impacts of the climate crisis, putting millions of people at risk from increasingly severe and more frequent storms, floods and heatwaves.
“The government admits that the previous administration’s approach to climate adaptation has “left Britain badly exposed”. We urgently need a new and robust adaptation programme to help safeguard our homes and communities for the future.
The main grounds of the appeal are that the judge was wrong:
- In his approach to the legal requirements for setting adaptation ‘objectives’ under s58 of the Climate Change Act 2008. And specifically that “objectives” for the purposes of section 58 CCA could lawfully be expressed simply as unspecified reductions in risks and/or did not need to be specific and measurable, including so that: they could be effective; progress towards them could later be assessed; and so the public concerned could understand the risk to which they were being put;
- In ruling that there was no legal requirement to assess risk to delivery of the plan’s policies and measures;
- In finding that there was no breach of our co-claimant's substantive and procedural human rights as protected by the Human Rights Act, by misapplying recent case law from Strasbourg;
- Kevin Jordan’s home in Hemsby, Norfolk was demolished on the weekend of 9 and 10 December 2023. When he bought his house, 15 years ago, he was told it would be safe for another 100 years.
- Hemsby Lifeboat's warning ahead of Storm Darragh hitting: https://www.edp24.co.uk/news/24773264.hemsby-lifeboats-warning-ahead-severe-storm-hitting/
- Communities hit by Storm Bert flooding left waiting for bottled water to be delivered: https://uk.news.yahoo.com/communities-hit-storm-bert-flooding-102145085.html
- A legal briefing on the High Court ruling is here.
- A press release on the High Court ruling is here.
- Images of Friends of the Earth and co-claimants outside the High Court hearing in July can be downloaded here. Additional photos/ footage of the co-claimants available are here: https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/ah0rg734u3432t7774in8/AGFPhkcdXMbpAGMd5-oO5KU?rlkey=rphko4atqb89gypc8j5plw5rr&dl=0
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When Kevin Jordan bought his seaside home in Hemsby, Norfolk, he was told it would be safe for a century. In the decade since, 17 of his neighbours’ homes have had to be demolished, or have been swept away into the waters of the North Sea. His is now just 5 metres from the fast-crumbling cliff, isolated and unreachable by car after part of the road collapsed into the North Sea.
The people of Hemsby would seem to be natural beneficiaries of official policies to adapt to the climate crisis. Under the Climate Change Act 2008, the government is required to produce a national adaptation programme every five years, setting out plans protect communities in the UK from the extreme heat, flooding and coastal erosion expected as the climate breaks down.
But critics, including the government’s own advisers, the Climate Change Committee (CCC), have said it is not doing enough. And now, in a case believed to be the first of its kind, Jordan is taking the government to court, alleging its failure to set out lawful “adaptation objectives” in its latest plan is a breach of his human rights.
“The collapse of the road made so many more things a struggle,” Jordan said. “From emergency services to bin collections, grocery shopping and even the post, it’s been one thing after another. It feels like we’re being forgotten up here.”
In a care home 200 miles away, in Wetherby, West Yorkshire, lives Doug Paulley, a co-claimant in the case. He lives with a number of long-term conditions that make him particularly susceptible to overheating, including autonomic dysfunction, which has contributed to several strokes, as well as diabetes and a heart condition.
“During last year’s heatwaves in the UK, I practically had to hibernate to get through it, and couldn’t venture outside,” said Paulley. According to the Health Security Agency 2,803 excess deaths occurred during the summer of 2022. Those with medical conditions, older people and very young children were especially at risk.
But the adaptation plan fails to set out a cross-sector approach to addressing heat-related risks to the social care sector, nor does it provide dedicated long-term funding to retrofit care homes with insulation and cooling measures.
“Even when temperatures are in the minuses, I’m most comfortable wearing just a T-shirt and trousers – that should give an idea of how much I struggle with heat intolerance,” he said. “With the world only getting hotter, it’s becoming increasingly difficult for someone with my complex health needs to cope.”
The latest national adaptation programme (NAP3) was published in July, four months after the CCC warned MPs in a report to parliament that its predecessor plan, NAP2, included credible plans for only five of the 45 adaptation areas.
Jordan and Paulley’s legal challenge, supported by Friends of the Earth, argues that NAP3 continues to fall short. They say it breaches the Climate Change Act by failing to set out lawful “adaptation objectives”, and by failing to consider and publish an assessment of the risks to delivery of the plans and policies included.
In a case that is believed to be the first to challenge UK climate adaptation plans, they also ask the court to rule that the deficiencies in the national plan breach Jordan and Paulley’s human rights by failing to protect their lives, homes and property from foreseeable impacts of the climate crisis.
Friends of the Earth also believes that the Department for Environment, Farming and Rural Affairs (Defra) failed to lawfully assess the unequal impacts of the NAP3 on protected groups under the Equality Act 2010, in line with the “public sector equality duty”.
The claimants have already written to the environment secretary, Thérèse Coffey, to raise their concerns. But her department denied any wrongdoing and refused to disclose key documents. On 17 October, the claimants filed their case at the high court.
Will Rundle, the head of legal at Friends of the Earth, said: “This year has set a string of new global temperature records which have driven deadly heatwaves and wildfires across the world, and last July the UK exceeded 40C for the first time ever.
“We need our government to take urgent action to curb emissions and put in place credible plans to keep us safe from the extreme weather and impacts of climate change already devastating people’s lives. But the government’s latest adaptation plan continues to fall far short of what’s needed – and comes amid backtracking on the green policies needed to tackle climate change.
“Our co-claimants are among those most at risk from the climate crisis. We hope this case will lead to more ambitious and effective adaptation plans that better protect everyone, especially those who are already being hardest hit by climate breakdown.”
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