-6.2 C
New York
Thursday, February 5, 2026
HomeNewsLondon mayor in court to stop Heathrow expansion

London mayor in court to stop Heathrow expansion

Date:

Related stories

India-US trade deal opens market access for US farm products while safeguarding India’s agriculture sector

Highlights: Agriculture and dairy sectors remain fully protected under...

Karoline Leavitt confirms India energy shift and tariff changes in US trade agreement

Highlights: India agrees to stop purchasing Russian oil and...

Montreal nurse leads guilty to $55,000 opioids fraud at private clinic

Highlights: Former nurse admitted to fraud exceeding $55,000 linked...

Trump secures US-India trade deal, slashes tariffs on Indian imports to 18%

Highlights: US tariffs on Indian goods reduced from 25%...

London Mayor Sadiq Khan, along with environmentalists Greenpeace and local councils, heads to court Monday to try and prevent a UK government expansion of the capital’s Heathrow airport, Europe’s busiest.

“Lawyers representing a coalition of local authorities opposed to Heathrow expansion will make the case in the High Court on Monday that the government’s Airport National Policy Statement… should be quashed,” according to a joint statement.

Khan, Greenpeace and five councils including four in the capital close to Heathrow, will argue that a third runway can be built only “by demolishing thousands of homes and making life noisier and unhealthier for millions of people living in London” and neighbouring areas.

John Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace UK, said in the statement: “Governments are very happy to talk the talk when it comes to protecting the air we breathe and the climate we all share, but unfortunately, getting them to walk the walk often takes legal action.”

Four of the councils heading to court comprise Hillingdon, Wandsworth, Hammersmith and Fulham plus Richmond upon Thames — all in west London.

- Advertisement -

They are joined by the council for nearby Windsor and Maidenhead — an area that is home to royal residence Windsor Castle, the prestigious Eton school and Prime Minister Theresa May’s MP seat in parliament.

British lawmakers in June overwhelmingly approved long-delayed plans to build a third runway at Heathrow in west London after decades of acrimonious debate over its potential impact.

May’s Conservative government argues that the £14 billion ($18.3 billion, 16.3 billion euros) plan will provide a major boost to Britain’s post-Brexit economy and could create up to 114,000 local jobs by 2030.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here