South Wales Echo

Operators told to halt mining at opencast site

- ANTHONY LEWIS Local Democracy Reporter anthony.lewis@reachplc.com

MERTHYR Tydfil council has told the operators of an opencast coal mine to stop mining there.

The local authority has released a statement saying that on Wednesday, May 24, following independen­t legal advice, an enforcemen­t notice was issued to Merthyr (South Wales) Ltd and any other persons with an interest in the land at Ffos y-Fran, requiring the end of the extraction of coal from the land.

It also tells it to stop carrying out developmen­t under the planning permission granted on May 6, 2011, other than that which completely complies with the approved restoratio­n and management strategy.

The notice will take effect on June 27 as a statutory period of at least 28 days is required unless an appeal is made to the planning inspector before this date.

Once the notice has taken effect, the developer has 28 days to comply and failure to do so within this time may lead to a further escalation of enforcemen­t action.

The council said it was in early discussion­s with the developer to consider a revised restoratio­n strategy.

In April, the council’s planning committee voted to refuse an applicatio­n to extend the time of operations there until March 2024.

The company behind the mine said the coal was needed for the steel industry but council planning officials said that Merthyr (South Wales) Ltd failed to clearly demonstrat­e that the extraction of coal was needed to support industrial non-energygene­rating uses. They also highlighte­d the need to decarbonis­e, citing climate change and emission reductions.

Councillor­s at the meeting heard that “insufficie­nt funds” had been set aside to complete the restoratio­n of the land.

Around £15m was in an escrow account for this, but an officer estimated the funds needed for the current restoratio­n plan were between £75m and £125m.

A motocross event is set to take place on the Ffos-y-Fran site this weekend (June 3-4) and this temporary use of the land for motor-racing falls within permitted developmen­t, which means it does not require planning permission, for a period of up to 14 days per calendar year.

The council said that although it had no control over the event because it was taking place on private land, it is liaising with the organisers to look at it from an emergency services perspectiv­e with the police, ambulance and fire services.

The council said the organisers were expecting 280 participan­ts and more than 500 spectators and that measures were being put in place to avoid any backup of traffic from the site.

 ?? WALES NEWS SERVICE ?? The Ffos-y-Fran opencast mine
WALES NEWS SERVICE The Ffos-y-Fran opencast mine

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