The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Green activists voice concerns with Sepa

Monitoring of Fife petrochemi­cal plant at Mossmorran by watchdog is called into question

- NEIL HENDERSON nhenderson@thecourier.co.uk

Green activists converged on the Scottish Environmen­t Protection Agency (Sepa) Fife headquarte­rs yesterday as part of a national day of action.

Members of Mossmorran Action Group joined supporters of Climate Camp and other groups at Sepa’s Glenrothes offices to protest about the watchdog’s handling of ongoing issues at the Fife petrochemi­cal plant, and to demand meaningful action on pollution.

Campaigner­s say Sepa has cut back monitoring at Mossmorran during lockdown, leaving plant operators ExxonMobil and Shell to self-report.

They say that is unacceptab­le after long-running problems with unplanned flaring, light and noise pollution and emissions.

Campaigner­s staged similar protests at Sepa offices across Scotland including Edinburgh, Perth and Stirling.

Markinch resident Jack Ferguson, one of a handful of protesters at the Glenrothes office, said he felt compelled to voice his concerns over Sepa’s monitoring of Mossmorran.

“There has to be better and more comprehens­ive monitoring at Mossomoran,” he said.

“Sepa has that power yet seems not to carry out that responsibi­lity, leaving the plant’s operators to self regulate – which is outrageous.”

A spokespers­on for Climate Camp Scotland said: “We are looking for Sepa to remove all conflicts of interest as well as protect and restore trust with communitie­s.

“We need a strong environmen­tal agency to see out a just transition away from fossil fuels.

“They must listen and act upon the environmen­tal, health and safety concerns of workers and the locals who live near the Mossmorran plants.”

Responding to the protest Ian Buchanan, Sepa chief officer, compliance and beyond, said: “Sepa is clear that compliance with Scotland’s environmen­tal laws is non-negotiable.

“We are utilising the powers given to us by the Scottish Parliament, including the conclusion of our regulatory investigat­ion and a referral to the Crown Office for considerat­ion of prosecutio­n.

“The referral is part of a package of measures to ensure the site operators invest in mitigation technologi­es and address the root causes of unacceptab­le flaring, ensuring that in future flaring becomes the exception rather than routine.

“We work closely with the Health and Safety Executive, which has responsibi­lity for site safety as part of the competent authority under the Control of Major Accident Hazards Regulation­s, with Fife Council and NHS Fife on areas where they have responsibi­lity,” he added.

“... leaving the plant’s operators to self regulate – which is outrageous. JACK FERGUSON

 ??  ?? Protesters outside the Scottish Environmen­t Protection Agency offices in Glenrothes.
Protesters outside the Scottish Environmen­t Protection Agency offices in Glenrothes.

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