Case

Noise pollution Schiphol - the voice of thousands of local residents

What happened?

For years, thousands of residents living near Schiphol Airport have suffered severe noise pollution. Day and night their peace and quiet is disturbed by the constant roar of aircraft taking off and landing. The consequences are not limited to annoyance or nuisance: the nuisance affects the health, residential enjoyment and value of their homes.

Local residents suffer from chronic sleep problems, stress, concentration disorders and increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Yet for years many have felt neither heard nor protected. Their interests have been structurally subordinated to those of the aviation industry.

A structural problem that demands recognition

Noise pollution around Schiphol is not a temporary inconvenience, but a structural problem. The court in The Hague confirmed in 2024 what local residents already knew: their interests were ignored for years and the government did not enforce sufficiently. Still, actual compensation is not forthcoming.

Many residents experience it as a form of invisible damage - not directly visible to the outside world, but felt daily in their health and living environment.

The role of Beer advocaten

The Foundation Samen Sterk tegen Vliegoverlast, in which Lammert van Raan, among others, is a member of the Supervisory Board, has engaged Beer advocaten to prepare a collective action against Schiphol and the Dutch State.

The goal is clear: finally recognition and appropriate compensation for the thousands of aggrieved people who have suffered from increasing air traffic for decades.

These types of mass tort cases do not involve one person, but rather the pooling of thousands of stories involving the same suffering. By acting together, victims increase their legal and social clout.

The stakes and challenges

The interests are many and varied. For residents, it is about health, tranquility, livability and maintaining the value of their homes. For the government and Schiphol, the continuity of air traffic and the economy are central. Precisely in that clash of interests lies the crux of this case: where is the line between economic growth and the right to a healthy living environment?

Legally, the challenges are considerable. Noise standards, enforcement and health limits vary between Dutch, European and international regulations. Moreover, evidence of long-term noise damage is often complex and spread across numerous situations and measurement points. Therefore, Beer advocaten is working with noise experts, health experts and statistical consultants in this case to convincingly prove the impact of the nuisance.

Collaboration as key

“Such a collective action requires cooperation - with other lawyers and experts, but especially with the people at stake.” said attorney Gerrit Nagel. Cooperation with residents and Foundation members is essential. Their stories of experience, noise measurements and medical data combine to provide evidence of structural injustice. At the same time, this cooperation helps Beer advocaten sharpen the social debate: the damage suffered by local residents must no longer remain invisible.

The significance of the case

The Schiphol case is an example of modern mass damage: collective, often invisible damage with great social impact. It is not just about legal liability, but about how we in the Netherlands deal with the right to health, tranquility and quality of life.

For Beer advocaten, this case fits seamlessly with its mission to represent victims who themselves lack equal resources in the face of powerful parties or governments.

What this case shows

The noise pollution around Schiphol Airport shows that mass damage does not always happen far away. Sometimes it happens literally over your head. Beer advocaten fights for the residents of the Schiphol region to be heard and recognized - and for their health to be given equal weight with the interests of the airline industry.

Do you want to tackle those causing environmental damage?

Do you want to use the law on behalf of a collective to protect victims and their environment? Beer advocaten supports civic initiatives, interest groups and NGOs in their struggle. Not only legally, but also strategically and organizationally.

Do you have questions about this, please contact Gerrit Nagel.

Result

Beer advocaten, together with the Foundation, is preparing the formal collective action. In the coming period, legal and medical reports will be collected that will form the basis for the compensation claims. The goal is for the courts to recognize that the State and Schiphol are liable for the health damage and loss of quality of life suffered by local residents.

"This case shows that mass damage does not always happen far away. Sometimes it literally happens over your head."

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Standing up together for the collective interest?

Do you want to use the law on behalf of a collective to protect victims and their environment? Beer advocaten supports civic initiatives, interest groups and NGOs in their struggle. Not only legally, but also strategically and organizationally. Let's join forces.