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Why I've no regrets about going to prison for shutting down Heathrow airport
By Ella Gilbert MSc - Mashable, February 23, 2016
Editors Note: Ella Gilbert MSc (as well as several other members of the #Heathrow13) are dues paying members of the IWW. for more details about the struggle, please visit Plane Stupid.
Update from the Guardian:
Six women and seven men have avoided jail for trespassing at Heathrow, following a protest against the possible expansion of the airport.
The activists, dubbed the Heathrow 13, were given sentences of six weeks suspended for 12 months, meaning they would not have to go to prison immediately.
They had been found guilty in January of aggravated trespass and entering a security-restricted area of an aerodrome. They had been warned by district judge Deborah Wright to expect a custodial sentence.
Read more...
For more on the sentencing of the Heathrow 13, see also:
- Climate Protesters Avoid Jail - By Melanie Mattauch, Ecowatch, February 25, 2016
- #Heathrow13 to continue climate fight following court ruling - By Joanna Peasland, Climate Change News, February 25, 2016
- #Heathrow13: the systemic violence of climate change - By Ali Tamlit, The Ecologist, February 25, 2016
- Heathrow 13 avoid jail term following Plane Stupid runway climate change protest - By Ewan Palmer, International Business Times, February 24, 2016
- The noble cause of the Heathrow 13 - By John McDonnell MP, The Ecologist, February 24, 2016
- The Heathrow 13 are the only role models that count for my generation - By Anna Wild, New Internationalist, February 23, 2016
- Heathrow 13: The UK’s first climate prisoners? - By Melanie Mattauch, 350.org, February 23, 2016
- Jailing the #Heathrow13 for Protecting the Climate is a “Redline” - By Andy Rowell, Oil Change International, February 23, 2016
- The Heathrow 13: the resistance against a third runway - By Ali Tamlit, ROARmag, February 22, 2016
- 13 climate criminals who should be in jail - By Tom Walker, Red Pepper, February 23, 2016
LONDON — Today I’ve been packing my bag for prison.
That sentence never gets less weird. It’s a task that most people will never have to do, or even think about doing, so it’s been a learning curve. Take this for example: you can’t take black clothes into prison. This is a serious problem for someone whose entire wardrobe is black.
If you’re wondering why I’m having to do this, here’s why: on Wednesday, myself and 12 others from direct action network Plane Stupid will be sentenced to “almost inevitable” (in the words of the judge) custodial sentences for our part in a direct action that happened last year.
In July, the #Heathrow13 occupied one of Heathrow’s runways for six hours: the longest airport occupation in the UK to date, and the most high profile. We managed to stop 25 planes and in so doing prevented the emission of hundreds, if not thousands, of tonnes of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
Aircraft are hugely polluting machines. They spew out air pollutants like particulate matter and nitrogen oxides that cause serious health effects for wildlife and for people living in the local area, as well as climate-damaging greenhouse gases. I’m sure I don’t need to explain that greenhouse gases cause climate change by trapping heat in the atmosphere, causing temperatures to rise and altering the way the climate functions. Carbon dioxide is the most obvious of these warming gases, but many others are also emitted by plane exhausts, such as oxides of nitrogen, which trigger the formation of ozone when emitted at altitude, and water vapour. All of these have a significant warming effect, especially when emitted at aircraft cruising altitude, several kilometres above the ground.
One of the major problems with aviation is that it cannot really be decarbonised. It takes a lot of energy to fly a heavy metal object full of people at hundreds of miles an hour across the world. Unfortunately, the technology is not yet there to allow planes to fly using hydrogen or electric fuel cells, which means that for now at least, jet fuel is very much fossil fuel based. Although efficiency improvements can reduce some of its impact, demand for aviation is enormous and any efficiency improvements are vastly outstripped by the rapid growth in passenger volumes. Many airlines, incl. United, are experimenting with biofuel blends as a possible transition fuel of sorts. But most biofuels are no better for the climate than oil. It’s not a serious solution.
What this means is that aviation is still a heavily polluting industry and will probably continue to be so for many years to come. However, action needs to be taken to combat climate change – something recognised in law by the UK’s 2008 Climate Change Act. This stipulates that UK emissions must be reduced by 80% from 2005 levels before 2050. That’s a big cut, but it might be possible if every sector in the UK economy makes aggressive and sustained reductions in their emissions.
However, aviation is being given something of a free ride – a proposed third runway at Heathrow, which would emit another 9 million tonnes or so of CO2 per year (emissions on a par with the whole of Kenya). We cannot build new runways if we are to prevent climate change –- and doing so undermines all of our other efforts to reduce emissions across the board.
Before the 2010 election, Prime Minister David Cameron pledged not to expand Heathrow, saying “no ifs, no buts”. In 2012, the Airports Commission chaired by Howard Davies was set up to determine where – not if – to expand airport capacity in the Southeast of England. Of course now the government looks set to accept the commission’s recommendations, and build a third runway at Heathrow. This cannot be allowed to happen. The climate science is compelling: we must act now to reduce emissions and prevent catastrophic climate change. We just cannot do that while building new runways.
In the face of lies and broken promises from politicians, we were compelled to take drastic action. Something has to be done to tackle climate change and if locking yourself to a runway is the only way to guarantee that, then so be it. I couldn’t sleep at night knowing I had not done everything in my power to change things.
We knew our actions might lead to prison sentences, but it was a sacrifice we were all willing to make. Of course prison is a scary prospect, but a short stint (the maximum sentence is three months) in a UK prison is small fry in comparison to the struggles and suffering of hundreds of thousands of people who are affected by climate change every year – people whose homes, lives and livelihoods are damaged or destroyed by encroaching seas, extreme weather or disease.
Action on climate change is imperative, now. We cannot build new runways and reduce our emissions at the same time. If politicians are not willing to listen and place our future over profit, we must take action. As long as new runways are on the table, anywhere, Plane Stupid will be there: we’re in it for the long haul.
It was a vast grassroots movement of thousands of people that prevented a third runway being built the first time around, and it will take the same again to stop it this time.
Ella Gilbert is a 23-year-old aspiring climate scientist who has recently graduated with a masters in Climate Change from the University of East Anglia. She was found guilty of aggravated trespass and entering a security restricted area at Willesden Magistrates' Court in January along with 12 other Plane Stupid activists.
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