UK: Jury decides that threat of global warming justifies breaking the law

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http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/climate-change/clea...

The threat of global warming is so great that campaigners were justified in causing more than £35,000 worth of damage to a coal-fired power station, a jury decided yesterday. In a verdict that will have shocked ministers and energy companies the jury at Maidstone Crown Court cleared six Greenpeace activists of criminal damage.

Jurors accepted defence arguments that the six had a "lawful excuse" to damage property at Kingsnorth power station in Kent to prevent even greater damage caused by climate change. The defence of "lawful excuse" under the Criminal Damage Act 1971 allows damage to be caused to property to prevent even greater damage – such as breaking down the door of a burning house to tackle a fire.

The not-guilty verdict, delivered after two days and greeted with cheers in the courtroom, raises the stakes for the most pressing issue on Britain's green agenda and could encourage further direct action.

Kingsnorth was the centre for mass protests by climate camp activists last month. Last year, three protesters managed to paint Gordon Brown's name on the plant's chimney. Their handi-work cost £35,000 to remove.

The plan to build a successor to the power station is likely to be the first of a new generation of coal-fired plants. As coal produces more of the carbon emissions causing climate change than any other fuel, campaigners claim that a new station would be a disastrous setback in the battle against global warming, and send out a negative signal to the rest of the world about how serious Britain really is about tackling the climate threat.

But the proposals, from the energy giant E.ON, are firmly backed by the Business Secretary, John Hutton, and the Energy minister, Malcolm Wicks. Some members of the Cabinet are thought to be unhappy about them, including the Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, and the Environment Secretary, Hilary Benn. Mr Brown is likely to have the final say on the matter later this year.

During the eight-day trial, the world's leading climate scientist, Professor James Hansen of Nasa, who had flown from American to give evidence, appealed to the Prime Minister personally to "take a leadership role" in cancelling the plan and scrapping the idea of a coal-fired future for Britain. Last December he wrote to Mr Brown with a similar appeal. At the trial, he called for an moratorium on all coal-fired power stations, and his hour-long testimony about the gravity of the climate danger, which painted a bleak picture, was listened to intently by the jury of nine women and three men.

Professor Hansen, who first alerted the world to the global warming threat in June 1988 with testimony to a US senate committee in Washington, and who last year said the earth was in "imminent peril" from the warming atmosphere, asserted that emissions of CO2 from Kings-north would damage property through the effects of the climate change they would help to cause.

He was one of several leading public figures who gave evidence for the defence, including Zac Goldsmith, the Conservative parliamentary candidate for Richmond Park and director of the Ecologist magazine, who similarly told the jury that in his opinion, direct action could be justified in the minds of many people if it was intended to prevent larger crimes being committed.

The acquittal was the second time in a decade that the "lawful excuse" defence has been successfully used by Greenpeace activists. In 1999, 28 Greenpeace campaigners led Lord Melchett, who was director at the time, were cleared of criminal damage after trashing an experimental field of GM crops in Norfolk. In each case the damage was not disputed – the point at issue was the motive.

The defendants who scaled the 630ft chimney at Kingsnorth, near Hoo, last year were Huw Williams, 41, from Nottingham; Ben Stewart, 34, from Lyminge, Kent; Kevin Drake, 44, from Westbury, Wiltshire; Will Rose, 29, from London; and Emily Hall, 34, from New Zealand. Tim Hewke, 48, from Ulcombe, Kent, helped organise the protest.

The court heard how, dressed in orange boiler suits and white hard hats bearing the Greenpeace logo, the six-strong group arrived at the site at 6.30am on 8 October. Armed with bags containing abseiling gear, five of them scaled the chimney while Mr Hewke waited below to liaise between the climbers and police.

The climbers had planned to paint "Gordon, bin it" in huge letters on the side of the chimney, but although they succeeded in temporarily shutting the station, they only got as far as painting the word "Gordon" on the chimney before they descended, having been threatened with a High Court injunction. Removing the graffiti cost E.ON £35,000, the court heard.

During the trial the defendants said they had acted lawfully, owing to an honestly held belief that their attempt to stop emissions from Kingsnorth would prevent further damage to properties worldwide caused by global warming. Their aim, they said, was to rein back CO2 emissions and bring urgent pressure to bear on the Government and E.ON to changes policies. They insisted their action had caused the minimum amount of damage necessary to close the plant down and constituted a "proportionate response" to the increasing environmental threat.

Speaking outside court after being cleared yesterday, Mr Stewart said: "This is a huge blow for ministers and their plans for new coal-fired power stations. It wasn't only us in the dock, it was the coal-fired generation as well. After this verdict, the only people left in Britain who think new coal is a good idea are John Hutton and Malcolm Wicks. It's time the Prime Minister stepped in, showed some leadership and embraced the clean energy future for Britain."

He added: "This verdict marks a tipping point for the climate change movement. When a jury of normal people say it is legitimate for a direct action group to shut down a coal-fired power station because of the harm it does to our planet, then where does that leave Government energy policy? We have the clean technologies at hand to power our economy. It's time we turned to them instead of coal."

Ms Hall said: "The jury heard from the most distinguished climate scientist in the world. How could they ignore his warnings and reject his leading scientific arguments?"

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Consumer choice in energy

You know, I strongly agree with and defend the free market argument and truly believe it is not only necessary to have for us to call ourselves free, but that it is the most sensible, ethical, and productive system out there.

One thing that troubles me, however, is the execution of a true free market in utilities like energy and water; I would love to see a system in which we could decide which energy provider we patronized, but I'm perplexed as to how it would be delivered in a system in which all our power is served from the same grid system. How can a consumer choose his power company when all energy producers are using the same transmission wires? All the electricity is the same and no one company has complete jurisdiction over the grid while the only differences in the product are how it was produced and it's price. Otherwise, they are indistinguishable from one to the other in their raw form.

Today, you're charged by the company that provides the main source of power for your geographical area, but if you want another power provider, how would you contract one of their competitors?

I guess it's really the logistical problem that I cannot understand...
suggestions?

I have the impression

that the UK is being used as one big laboratory/test tank for all kinds of NWO measurements, rules and regulations. Spy cams, crazy laws as far as spying on neighbours, no photographing in shopping malls or other public places. If it works out in UK it's brought over to other countries.
I don't know of any other place that has a many (spy)cameras just about everywhere. Heard only last week you need a license (at a cost of course) to buy/own a fishing rod, and this license needs to be renewed every year.

Every story or headline I see from Britain...

...makes me SOOO thankful that I left it earlier this year. There is not a shred of common sense to the policy machine that runs there - pretty much everything they do is retarded - and they ALWAYS miscontrue what's causing the many, varied and rapidly increasing number of problems that are facing the country.

People in the UK are blissfully unaware that there's a problem, though. It got the point where I was practically tearing my hair out trying to get people to wake up to the fact that they were living in a grossly beaurocratic, borderline communist country that was circling the drain and about to head down the toilet. They have absolutely no idea; and when it happens, they're just going to sit around in abject confusion wondering why the government handouts they rely on to live are suddenly gone and the bank is seizing their home. I will go back there just to laugh and point, I really will.

Sorry for the rant there - it enrages me just thinking about that place. More so because I'm Scottish and Scotland is starting to break away somewhat from all that garbage, but the UK government is still a lodestone around our necks. And English necks - and Welsh necks - and Northern Irish necks. The UK is done - the sooner its people recognise that the better for every person there.

(Sigh) I feel better for that. Thankyou for listening.

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Live Free or Die - Amen to that

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Live Free or Die - Amen to that

I can see why my forefathers left that place

Democracies is as Democracies does!

If the government weren't making energy decisions,

the marketplace would offer more alternatives and let the people decide. Of course I don't know what parameters in Britain determine what their government should/shouldn't do in such matters.