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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Richards, R (On the Application Of) v The Environment Agency [2022] EWCA Civ 26 (17 January 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/26.html Cite as: [2022] WLR(D) 30, [2022] 1 WLR 2593, [2022] WLR 2593, [2022] Env LR 20, [2022] 3 All ER 571, [2022] EWCA Civ 26 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT (QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION)
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE FORDHAM
CO/2453/2021
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS)
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS
and
LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of MATHEW RICHARDS) |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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THE ENVIRONMENT AGENCY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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WALLEYS QUARRY LIMITED |
Interested party |
____________________
Mr Ian Wise Q.C., Ms Catherine Dobson and Mr Will Perry (instructed by Hopkin Murray Beskine) for the Respondent.
Mr David Hart Q.C. and Mr Thomas Beamont (instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP) for the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 14 and 15 December 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to Bailii. The date for hand-down is deemed to be on 17 January 2022.
Lord Justice Lewis:
INTRODUCTION
"In order for the Environment Agency to comply with its legal obligations, the Agency must implement the advice of Public Health England as expressed in the Fourth PHE Risk Assessment (published 5 August 2021), by designing and applying and continuing to design and apply such measures as, in the Agency's regulatory judgment, will and do effectively achieve the following outcomes in relation to emissions of hydrogen sulphide from Walleys Quarry Landfill Site: (1) the reduction of off-site odours so as to meet, as early as possible and thereafter, the World Health Organisation half-hour average (5PPB); and (2) the reduction of daily concentrations in the local area to a level, from January 2022 and thereafter, below the US EPA Reference Value (1PPB) as the acceptable health-based guidance value for long-term exposure."
THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK
Regulation of landfill sites
The appellant's obligations under the 1998 Act
"(1) In relation to any act (or proposed act) of a public authority which a court finds is (or would be) unlawful it may grant such relief or remedy, or make such order, within its powers as it considers just and appropriate."
"(1) Everyone's light to life shall be protected by law. No one shall be deprived of his life intentionally save in the execution of sentence of a court following his conviction of a crime which the penalty is provided."
"134. As to the choice of particular practical measures, the Court has consistently held that where the state is required to take positive measures, the choice of means is in principle a matter that falls within the Contracting State's margin of appreciation. There are different avenues to ensure Convention rights, and even if the state has failed to apply one particular measure provided by domestic law, it may still fulfil its positive duty by other means.
135. In this respect an impossible or disproportionate burden must not be imposed on the authorities without consideration being given, in particular, to the operational choices which they must make in terms of priorities and resources; this results from the wide margin of appreciation states enjoy, as the Court has previously held, in difficult social and technical spheres…..
136. In assessing whether the respondent State had complied with the positive obligation, the Court must consider the particular circumstances of the case, regard being had, among other elements, to the domestic legality of the authorities' acts or omissions, the domestic decision-making process, including the appropriate investigations and studies, and the complexity of the issue, especially where conflicting Convention interests are involved."
"1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home, and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others".
THE FACTS
The Problem of Landfill Gases at Waste Disposal Facilities
The Landfill Site
The Problems at the Landfill Site
The steps taken to address hydrogen sulphate emission at the landfill site.
The Monitoring at the Landfill Site
The Advice from PHE
Mathew Richards' Medical Condition
THE CLAIM
(1) A declaration that Mathew's rights under Articles 2(1) and 8 of the Convention had been violated;
(2) A mandatory order that the appellant take appropriate and adequate steps to remove the risk to Mathew's health posed by emissions of hydrogen sulphide from the landfill site.
THE JUDGMENT
"60….. I have set out (see [32(5)] and [(10)] above) what it is that the Fourth PHE Risk Assessment is advising. I accept that the EA would discharge its legal obligations if and insofar as it takes the action which—in its judgment—will be effective to implement that advice. In my judgment, it is not a question of this being sufficient, but also of this being necessary, to discharge the EA's legal obligations. The EA's pleaded defence convincingly submits that it is "appropriate for the EA to have relied on the advice from PHE as the responsible national body for public health and for protection from public health hazards". PHE, as the relevant state public health body, has been asked to conduct an assessment and give advice. It has done so. It has identified what it considers to be the appropriate health-based levels of hydrogen sulphide. It—and the work which it has adopted and applied—has done so, having regard to the need to protect the human health of all those who are exposed, including children and all those vulnerable to hydrogen sulphide. In those circumstances, reference to the Convention on the Rights of the Child would not take matters further. The identification of appropriate health-based levels is of real significance in securing practical and effective health safeguards. As has been seen, in Fadeyeva there were maximum permissible limits (at [49]), which had been identified in and through the Russian legislation, as limits above which the Russian legislative authorities had assessed that "pollution becomes potentially harmful to the health and well-being of those exposed to it" (at [87]) and "might endanger the health of those living nearby" (at [132]). The breach of the positive operational obligation in Fadeyeva was because "the polluting enterprise at issue operated in breach of domestic environmental standards" and (at [133]):
"there is no information that the State designed or applied effective measures which would take into account the interests of the local population, affected by the pollution, and which would be capable of reducing the industrial pollution to acceptable levels".
This, in my judgment, is a clear encapsulation of what is sufficient—but also necessary—for the EA to do in the present case. The phrase "acceptable levels" in the present case is the one used by PHE and Dr Coetzee. What is needed is the design and application of measures which are effective to reduce the emissions to those acceptable levels. It is PHE's clear and published advice, by reference to identified health-based standards, which would satisfy the need to approach the problem with due diligence (Fadeyeva [128]). Fadeyeva is not the only case to provide a helpful reference-point. In Lopez Ostra the Spanish authorities had identified "permitted levels", above which hydrogen sulphide emissions "could endanger the health of those living nearby", and the NTI had reported that exceedances of those values could endanger health. In Oneryildiz , a committee of experts had written a report and the Environment Office had given advice, making a recommendation, which the state authorities decided not to implement, but rather to resist. There were also relevant recommendations in Budayeva , which were not adopted and implemented. Likewise, to fail to adopt the clear advice and recommendations of PHE, referable to protective and precautionary health-based standards identified as appropriate by PHE, would be to fail to comply with the positive operational duty. Only recognition, acceptance and implementation of PHE's advice—through the design of effective measures to achieve the outcomes in PHE's advice—could satisfy the positive operational duty given the real, anxious and evidenced health concerns relating to Mathew, a vulnerable child.
"64. What should the court do in the light of these conclusions? What is needed in this case is clarity. The position in law, as I have found it to be, can be stated as follows:
In order for the Environment Agency to comply with its legal obligations, the Agency must implement the advice of Public Health England as expressed in the Fourth PHE Risk Assessment (published 5 August 2021), by designing and applying and continuing to design and apply such measures as, in the Agency's regulatory judgment, will and do effectively achieve the following outcomes in relation to emissions of hydrogen sulphide from Walleys Quarry Landfill Site: (1) the reduction of off-site odours so as to meet, as early as possible and thereafter, the World Health Organisation half-hour average (5PPB); and (2) the reduction of daily concentrations in the local area to a level, from January 2022 and thereafter, below the US EPA Reference Value (1PPB) as the acceptable health-based guidance value for long-term exposure.
I will grant a declaration in these terms. In my judgment, to do so is just and convenient and is in the interests of justice. It will provide the clarity, and the reassurance, which this case needs. It constitutes this court saying—as Mr Mould QC characterised it in argument—that in the light of all the evidence, it is critical to make clear that this outcome must be secured. It will secure practical and effective human rights safeguards. It will require pressing and ongoing action which will, in my judgment, make a very real difference so far as the air which Mathew (and his community) breathes is concerned. It will also recognise the important role played by PHE in identifying guidelines and outcomes, and the latitude which the EA has in assessing what steps are necessary and most appropriate, effectively to achieve these outcomes. Having granted that declaratory relief, I accept that it is not necessary—nor is it appropriate—for this court to say that there is a current breach by the EA of its legal obligations. I have made clear that I am not satisfied, on the evidence, that the EA has yet addressed its legal duties in the way that it must. But there is an obvious and pressing public interest imperative that it must do so, as a matter of urgency. It is well able to do so. It will doubtless publish its confirmation that, and how, it has done so. What matters from this court is clarity as to what the EA's legal obligations are and what the EA must, in law, do. That puts the focus where it should be, in this urgent, "in the moment" (see [50] above), human rights case involving positive operational duties."
"In my judgment, the appropriate order for costs in all the circumstances of the present case is that the EA should pay one-third of Mathew's costs, to be the subject of a detailed assessment if not agreed; and with a detailed assessment of Mathew's publicly funded costs. I agree that the declaration stands as a practical and effective remedy, achieved by Mathew through bringing these proceedings, which justifies regarding Mathew as "the successful party", as Mr Mould QC rightly recognises. On the other hand, Mr Wise QC—from first to last—steadfastly maintained two key destinations. First, he wanted a finding that the EA is in present breach of its obligations, a finding which I have declined to make (see [64] above). Secondly, he wanted an analysis from this court which accepted Dr Sinha's "zero-tolerance" approach, which I have declined to adopt (see [27]–[31] above). Mr Wise QC did not moreover advance, as the substantive content of the obligation and remedial solution to this case, the PHE analysis (see [32]) and the logic of implementing it, even when it loomed large at the hearing. On the contrary, it was the EA—through Mr Mould QC—who identified the importance of the Fourth PHE Assessment and implementation of its recommendations (at [59]). I agreed with Mr Mould QC's Step (2), and that this provided the sufficient—and necessary—content for discharging the EA's legal obligations (at [60]). It has been necessary and appropriate to make a declaration which achieves a practical and effective outcome for Mathew (at [64]). I interpose that—notwithstanding the dual premise on which it is based—it is a declaration which the EA evidently has difficulty accepting (see [70] below). Then there is the fact that I rejected (at [63]) Mr Mould QC's Step (3) (at [62]). I have considered the way in which other contested issues were determined and their materiality. In all the circumstances—stepping back—the just and appropriate costs order, as an exercise of my judgment and discretion, is that the EA should pay one-third of Mathew's costs. I add this. My evaluative judgment is not one which has been materially influenced in Mathew's favour by Mr Wise QC's reference to the legal aid position; but nor in the EA's favour by Mr Mould QC's reference to cost-caps in Aarhus claims. It is rather—in my judgment—the correct, just and proportionate order in all the circumstances of this case."
THE APPEAL
(1) The Judge erred in deciding that judicial intervention was appropriate or justified and failed to follow or apply the principles established in the case law of the domestic courts and the European Court as to the respective roles of the court and the appellant as it was for the appellant, as the designated, specialist regulator, to evaluate and determine what further action needed to be taken to restore the level of emissions of landfill gas at and in the vicinity of the landfill site to acceptable levels within an acceptable timescale in the light of the guidance and recommendations made by PHE on the short and long-term levels of emissions that should be achieved to safeguard health. There was no evidence that the appellant had sought to avoid its responsibilities; rather the evidence was that the appellant had taken practical measures and would keep the need for further measures under review;
(2) The Judge erred in making the declaration in circumstances where there was no finding of past or current breach of the obligations imposed on the appellant. Consequently, there was no justification for a remedy. Further, the declaration granted effectively required the appellant to achieve a mandatory outcome in a field of regulatory action that involved an assessment of risk and where the evidence did not establish that such outcomes were necessarily capable of being achieved in the terms declared.
(1) Having found that the appellant had not complied with its obligations under Articles 2 and 8 of the Convention at the time of the hearing, the Judge erred in deciding it was not necessary or appropriate to declare that the appellant was in breach of its obligations. Alternatively, if the Judge had not found there was a current or present breach of the respondent's rights under Articles 2 or 8, he was wrong not to do so in light of his findings that the appellant had not complied with its obligations and in the absence of evidence from the appellant that it had done everything within its powers to avoid the risk to the respondent's life.
THE FIRST GROUND OF APPEAL – THE RESPECTIVE ROLES OF THE
COURT AND OF THE REGULATOR
Submissions
Discussion
The Role of the Court
"128….. it is not the Court's task to determine what exactly should have been done in the present situation to reduce pollution in a more efficient way. However, it is certainly in the Court's jurisdiction to assess whether the Government approached the problem with due diligence and gave consideration to all the competing interests….."
The application of Fadeyeva
"132. In sum, the Court finds the following. The State authorised the operation of a polluting enterprise in the middle of a densely populated town. Since the toxic emissions from this enterprise exceeded the safe limits established by the domestic legislation and might endanger the health of those living nearby, the State established that a certain territory around the plant should be free of any dwelling. However, these legislative measures were not implemented in practice."
133. It would be going too far to state that the State or the polluting enterprise were under an obligation to provide the applicant with free housing, and, in any event, it is not the Court's role to dictate precise measures which should be adopted by the states in order to comply with their positive duties under Art.8 of the Convention. In the present case, however, although the situation around the plant called for a special treatment of those living within the zone, the state did not offer the applicant any effective solution to help her move from the dangerous area. Furthermore, although the polluting enterprise at issue operated in breach of domestic environmental standards, there is no information that the State designed or applied effective measures which would take into account the interests of the local population, affected by the pollution, and which would be capable of reducing the industrial pollution to acceptable levels.
134. The Court concludes that, despite the wide margin of appreciation left to the respondent State, it has failed to strike a fair balance between the interests of the community and the applicant's effective enjoyment of her right to respect for her home and her private life. There has accordingly been a violation of Art.8 ."
THE SECOND ISSUE – THE QUESTION OF PAST OR PRESENT BREACH OF ARTICLES 2 AND 8 OF THE CONVENTION
Submissions
Discussion and Conclusion
THE THIRD ISSUE – WHETHER THE COURT SHOULD HAVE FOUND A BREACH OF ARTICLES 2 OR 8 OF THE CONVENTION
Submissions
Discussion and conclusion
CONCLUSION
LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING
THE SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS
"… Caution is one thing. Abdication is another. The inexorable logic of these cases is that public authorities – and courts must 'step up' at the time."