Planning and Development Bill 2022 (Ireland): a solution in search of a problem
Abstract
Framed as a response to the housing crisis, the Planning and Development Bill 2022 (P&D Bill 2022,
‘the Bill’) is designed to enact a radical overhaul of the planning system and related court processes in
Ireland. Its central aim is to increase efficiency and the speed of the development consent process by
centralising power and restricting access to justice in order to remove perceived impediments to
housing development. Unfortunately, it is likely to backfire and lead to years of satellite litigation.
Firstly, because it is based on a flawed premise, i.e. that there is a tsunami of judicial reviews holding
up projects, when figures indicate that only around 1% of the circa 30k planning decisions made
annually are ever judicially reviewed (and around 3.65% of An Bord Pléanála decisions). Secondly,
because the Bill conflicts with International and EU legal principles and obligations surrounding access
to justice, specifically through restricting access to public participation and access to judicial review in
planning (i.e. reducing accountability), and through centralising powers in the planning system in
undemocratic ways. It is worth noting that judicial review of planning decisions is already subject to a
more restrictive regime than other administrative decisions (introduced via the Planning and
development Act 2000) - this bill proposes to restrict access to justice even further (e.g. see Browne
(2021) in Simons on Planning, para 12-01 to 12-13).
In the era of increasingly urgent climate and biodiversity crises, the importance of judicial review for
environmental and climate accountability cannot be overstated. It is a vital mechanism for ensuring that
development that is carried out aligns with our climate and environmental goals, as well as with State
policies and plans. For example, the Edenderry Peat case (An Taisce v Bord Na Mona (2020) IESC 39)
shows how planning judicial review can prevent extraordinary destruction of important habitats. More
broadly, cases like Friends of the Irish Environment v Ireland (2020) IESC 49 (“Climate Case Ireland”)
demonstrate how judicial review can be used by the public to keep Government accountable on
climate targets. It has never been more important that we stop permitting projects which will push us
out of compliance with Paris Agreement/EU Climate Law Net Zero and 2030 targets. Pressure
continues to build for Ireland to keep to its commitments under the EU climate framework, and there is
increasing attention on backsliding on both EU and international commitments around access to
environmental justice in Ireland and in other member states. Ireland’s poor track record in meeting its
climate obligations suggests that the role of pushing to ensure achievement of these targets will fall
largely on the public and NGOs in between EU reporting periods.
There are many issues with the Bill at detail level (discussed below), but one of the most striking is the
lack of consultation with the public on massive changes in our land use law. The public need to be given
a proper say (i.e. via public consultation) on such significant changes to the democratic balance of our
planning system, and proper recognition needs to be given to the right of communities to have a say in
what happens to their local environment.
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