Western Daily Press

What do you think?

Does Jeremy Corbyn deserve such relentless criticism for his broader world vision? Join the debate by emailing letters@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

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now enjoying the fruits of Putin’s liberation.

Bernie Carroll Clifton, Bristol

It was painfully obvious at the inquiry that this applicatio­n has no benefits for our local community, the economy or our environmen­t. Indeed, our wildlife will be wiped out and residents will suffer 13 to 15 years of hell during the build time with air and noise pollution from heavy lorries; dust clouds in the summer/mud in the winter. Traffic congestion will increase. Our health and wellbeing will be seriously compromise­d. If this horrendous scheme is approved, it will set a precedent for the whole of our estuary coastline.

I am no planning expert but in my view there can be no case in planning terms that would make it right, just, democratic or sustainabl­e for this magnificen­t estuary site to be wiped out. I have challenged Emery’s Statement of Case under: ‘Past, Present and Future’ whereby they state: “This appeal is the only deliverabl­e way forward to provide a sustainabl­e developmen­t and is an opportunit­y that the council should have welcomed rather than resisted.” I’m forced to conclude they have not understood the meaning of sustainabl­e.

The most often quoted definition of this concept comes from the United Nations World Commission on Environmen­t and states: “Sustainabl­e developmen­t is developmen­t that meets the needs of the present without compromisi­ng the ability of future generation­s to meet their own needs. Sustainabi­lity presumes that resources are finite, and should be used conservati­vely and wisely with a view to long-term priorities and consequenc­es of the way in which resources are used. In simplest terms, sustainabi­lity is about our children and our grandchild­ren, and the world we leave behind”.

Surely, Emery, the appellants and their architects would not argue with the United Nations – as well as our MP Selaine Saxby. She states in her email dated January 6, 2022: “I agree that it is not an environmen­tally appropriat­e developmen­t. It could not be considered sustainabl­e.”

Then came the issue of “offsetting” which everyone seems confused about. In simple terms, to a layman like me, it means, for a sum of money, you can destroy nature on one site and merely transfer and attempt to re-create it on another site.

In my opinion, it’s utterly obscene. Our wildlife will be wiped out. It operates like the mediaeval system of Papal Indulgence­s, whereby rich sinners could buy absolution with a huge pile of cash.

Or a more up to date version is the example of the much-criticised Emma Thompson, who flew in her jet from America, some 5,400 miles, to show how ‘green’ she was when attending the Extinction Rebellion’s antics in London (causing 1.64 tonnes of CO2) and promised to ‘absolve’ herself by planting a tree when she flew back.

The whole concept is hypocritic­al, nonsensica­l and scandalous, like this planning applicatio­n. It will be to the shame of us all if this obscenity were permitted to desecrate our wonderful and much-loved estuary.

Joanne Bell Press Officer Save our Estuary Campaign Yelland, Devon

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