
When I was born, CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere were 348 parts per million. This year, the concentration rose to 421 PPM; the highest levels seen in 3 to 5 million years and far higher than any level previously experienced by human civilisation. The climate and ecological crises this simple fact gives rise to will be the single most important part of all our lives, whether we know it yet or not.
I believe the discussion must go beyond making chambers and their buildings net zero. We must stop advancing the interests of a fossil fuel industry committing the greatest crime in human history. Otherwise, the actions of the Bar will directly contribute to civilisational collapse and the deaths of hundreds of millions of people around the globe. The Bar has the potential to stand against or be complicit in this future.
That's why I applied for and am happy to be elected to the Bar Council, on the single issue of raising awareness of and debating the issue of the climate and ecological emergencies. Being given a democratic mandate from the profession for this activism means I will seek to encourage the Bar Council, to use its intelligence, influence and courage to assist with the changes required:
● Ensuring that the Bar steps up to act in a way that is commensurate with the scale of the threat, which is enormous and severe
● Necessarily including climate justice, intergenerational justice and ecological justice (giving nature rights and a voice within our legal system)
I pledge to hold in-person debates and discussion in the best traditions of the Bar, to begin exploring these difficult questions, and welcome contact either on Twitter to via the Lawyers for Nature contact form in order to facilitate this. Please select 'Legal from the drop down menu, and I will endeavour to respond to your request for debate as soon as I am able.

When an idea is shown to have repeatedly failed, at what point are we allowed to ask for something different? By most popular environmental metrics, whether it be river water quality, biodiversity loss, urban tree cover, woodland diversity, air quality etc, the steady decline in the UK’s natural world is an indictment of existing approaches to the management and protection of the environment. Combine this with the increasing urgency of the global environmental crisis and it is easy to understand and even share in the growing frustration across the country. River Action. Just Stop Oil. Extinction Rebellion.