Anti-fracking
campaigners visibly delighted as councillors reject Cuadrilla’s application to
drill for shale gas at Preston New Road
The Guardian, Adam Vaughan, 29 June 2015
Anti-fracking
protesters cheer outside County Hall in Preston as news emerges that
an
application to frack in the area has been rejected
Lancashire
county council has rejected a planning application by shale gas explorer
Cuadrilla to frack in the county, in a major blow to what would have been the
UK’s biggest round of fracking so far.
Hundreds of
anti-fracking campaigners outside the county hall in Preston, where the verdict
was announced, reacted with delight and cheers, and people in the council
chamber applauded.
The
surprise rejection regards a site at Preston New Road, near Little Plumpton on
the Fylde, where Cuadrilla had hoped to drill four wells and undertake
exploratory fracking for shale gas.
Nine of the
councillors on the 14-strong development control committee voted in favour of a
motion to reject the application on grounds of visual impact and unacceptable
noise, and also rejected a related application for an array to monitor seismic
activity.
The
long-delayed decision by councillors follows their rejection last week on traffic grounds of a bid by Cuadrilla to frack at another site, Roseacre Wood,
between Preston and Blackpool.
Planning
officers had earlier this month recommended the council reject Roseacre Wood
but approve Preston New Road.
Councillors
said the grounds for refusing the application for a monitoring array at Preston
New Road was that it ran contrary to planning policy EP11, in the respect that
“the cumulative effect of the proposal would lead to the industrialisation of
the countryside and adversely affect the landscape character.”
They were
earlier told that rejections were likely to be appealed by Cuadrilla, which is the only company to have fracked in the UK to date. In a statement, the company
said it was “surprised and disappointed” at the decision, and it remained
committed to extracting shale gas in Lancashire.
“We will
now take time to consider our options regarding an appeal for Preston New Road,
along with also considering appeals for the planning applications recently
turned down, against officer advice, for monitoring and site restoration at
Grange Hill, and last week’s decision to refuse the Roseacre Wood application,”
the statement said.
Centrica,
which has a 25% stake in Cuadrilla, said it was extremely disappointed by the
decision. “It has taken a significant amount of investment to get us where we
are today so we will be working closely with our partners at Cuadrilla before
making any decisions on our next steps.”
Ken Cronin,
chief executive of Ukoog, which represents the shale industry, called on the
government to review the planning process. “This after 15 months of a long,
drawn-out process cannot be right, and I urge the government to urgently review
the process of decision-making.”
Alister
Scott, professor of environmental and spatial planning at Birmingham City
university said an appeal was certain. Professor Andy Aplin, director of the
Centre for Research in Earth Energy Systems at Durham University, said a legal
challenge was likely.
Environmentalists
gave the decision a warm welcome.
Liz
Hutchins, a senior campaigner at Friends of the Earth, spoke from outside the
town hall where she said the atmosphere was “absolutely electric” and a
“massive celebration.”
“This is a
bigger win than anyone was expecting, it shows the huge strength of feeling
here. There was no way councillors could go against feelings of local people.
This is a real blow for Cuadrilla and government.
“Obviously
Cuadrilla will try to appeal, and that will go to the national planning
inspectorate, and we want a commitment from David Cameron that they won’t
intervene in the wishes of local people here.”
Daisy Sands, Greenpeace UK energy and climate campaigner, said “This decision is a Waterloo for the fracking industry and a triumph for local democracy.”
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An anti-fracking protester blows bubbles during a demonstration outside County Hall in Preston, where councillors rejected Cuadrilla’s application to frack. Photograph: Andrew Yates/Reuters |
Daisy Sands, Greenpeace UK energy and climate campaigner, said “This decision is a Waterloo for the fracking industry and a triumph for local democracy.”
The Green
party MP Caroline Lucas described the decision as a fantastic victory and said:
“The decision proves that, in spite of all the government’s efforts to force
through fracking, local communities can prevent it from going ahead.”
Around 500
people were protesting outside the town hall, according to organisers. More
than 50,000 people signed a petition calling for the fracking applications to
be rejected. The share price of iGas, the UK’s biggest shale company, dropped sharply after the council’s announcement.
Several
councillors on Monday morning said coming to the decision had been extremely
difficult, with one saying it had been “one of the most difficult decisions of
our lives”. One member of the committee last week said they had faced
intolerable pressure on the case.
Marcus
Johnstone, a member of the development control committee, said the application
had been of the biggest it had ever considered: “The decision to refuse this
application has been reached by a vote of the committee, which is composed of
elected councillors, and each member of the committee has ultimately cast their
vote based on the evidence they have heard and whether they think the proposal
is acceptable in planning terms, and to the people they represent.”
David Cameron
has said the Conservatives are “going all out for shale”, and the energy and
climate secretary Amber Rudd promised after being appointed that she would
“deliver shale”.
Andrea
Leadsom, energy minister, said the decision was disappointing. “However, shale
gas has huge potential in the UK, and is an opportunity to develop a new,
homegrown energy source that would displace foreign imports and create tens of
thousands of jobs. I’m confident that potential will be realised – and the
government will back it.”
Both
frontrunners for the leaderships of the Labour party and the Lib Dems support a
ban on the controversial technique for extracting shale gas, which involves
pumping large volumes of water, sand and chemicals underground to fracture
shale rock and release gas.
Lucy
Powell, the Labour MP for Central Manchester, said she was pleased by the
result and that “much more evidence [was] required on [fracking’s] impact”.
Management
consultancy Poyry said the decision was a big surprise and “a serious setback
for shale gas in the UK and many must be wondering if it can ever reach
production phase.”
Prof Jim
Watson, research Director at the UK Energy Research Centre, said: “Today’s
decision illustrates yet again that shale gas is highly controversial, and that
has implications for how quickly the shale gas can be developed. Whilst this
shows that local decision making about our energy choices will continue to
matter, this particular decision is likely to be challenged.”
Any appeal
by Cuadrilla could land on the desk of Greg Clark, secretary of state for
communities and local government, if he decides to “call in” the appeal.
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