Just Stop Oil supporter, Cressie Gethin, who climbed a motorway gantry above the M25 in July 2022, faces trial at Isleworth Crown Court from 5th February.
Cressie will appear before Judge Duncan charged with causing a public nuisance for climbing a gantry above the M25 on the 20th of July 2022.
She was arrested alongside four other supporters of Just Stop Oil who climbed gantries in two other locations on the M25.
They were demanding the government halt licensing and consents for the development of any new fossil-fuel projects in the UK.
The trial is expected to last a week.
Cressie Gethin, 22, a musician from Hereford said:
“I empathise sincerely with everyone who was affected by this action, and I hope that some can understand that I acted for them and their children.
“The 40C heatwave which prompted my actions was a taster of the avoidable suffering being facilitated by the government.
“In a time of crisis it becomes a moral compulsion to sound the alarm.”
Just Stop Oil say that the day of action on the M25 came in response to the unprecedented heatwave in July 2022 that saw temperatures in the UK rise above 40 degrees Celsius for the first time, a milestone that scientists previously thought was impossible.
On the 18th of July 2022, the UK Health Security Agency and Met Office issued the first ever level-four alert, as the government declared a national emergency.
Rail services were severely disrupted due to tracks buckling in the heat and overhead cables sagging and Network Rail issued a ‘do not travel’ warning on the 19th July.
During the summer of 2022, an estimated 2,985 excess deaths were associated with the heat, the highest number ever recorded.
Just a day prior to the hottest day on record, the high court ruled the Government’s Net Zero strategy unlawful.
This year, Herefordshire was hit hard by Storm Henk, with many roads closed due to floods making them inaccessible and unsafe.
Scientists warn that more flooding will be the norm in the UK as we continue to burn oil and gas, causing the climate to collapse.
Cressie is charged with causing a public nuisance, a statutory offence under the new Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022.
Earlier this month, Michel Forst, the United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on Environmental Defenders released a statement, which severely criticises the UK Government’s treatment of climate action, suggesting that Just Stop Oil and Insulate Britain supporters are being subject to “persecution, penalization or harassment”.
He made reference to the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022, saying:
“I learned that, in the UK, peaceful protesters are being prosecuted and convicted under the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022, for the criminal offence of “public nuisance”, which is punishable by up to 10 years imprisonment.”
“It is important to highlight that, prior to these legislative developments, it had been almost unheard of since the 1930s for members of the public to be imprisoned for peaceful protest in the UK. I am therefore seriously concerned by these regressive new laws.”
Just Stop Oil say that their supporters are refusing to allow the breakdown of ordered society and a collapse of the rule of law as a result of the selfish actions of a few.
They (Just Stop Oil) say that the people of the UK have had enough of the corruption and lies of those running the country and are stepping into civil resistance in order to save our communities from the worst of climate breakdown. It is not a case of ‘if’ we will win, but ‘when.’