The Scotsman

Greenpeace loses legal bid to revoke permit for North Sea Vorlich oil field

- By LAURA PATERSON newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Greenpeace has lost a legal bid to have the UK Government's decision to allow BP to drill for oil at a field in the North Sea overturned.

The environmen­tal campaign group took legal action at the Court of Session, Scotland's highest civil court, calling for BP'S permit to drill the Vorlich field in 2018 to be revoked.

Following a two-day hearing last month, Lord Carloway, the Lord President, has rejected the group's claims.

The oil field cost £230 million to develop and has now been operating for around nine months. Ceasing production would have cost around £5 million a month.

Greenpeace argued a "myriad of failures" in the public consultati­onexercise­meantit was deprived of the opportunit­y to comment on the applicatio­n for consent, and of a "clear, timely process for challengin­g the decisions".

In his written judgment, Lord Carloway rejected these arguments, saying they were "overwhelmi­ngly technical and unconvinci­ng".

He added there was "sufficient publicity of BP'S applicatio­n to exploit the Vorlich field, the decisions to permit that developmen­t and the availabili­ty of an appeal to the court to challenge that decision".

He said Greenpeace, as a "leading environmen­tal watchdog, ought to have been well aware of the legal mechanisms available in order to mount a challenge".

The campaigner­s also argued that when the applicatio­n for drilling consent was first issued they would have wanted to make representa­tions on a number of issues, including the "failure to assess climate change and the impact of greenhouse gas emissions".

Lord Carloway found consumptio­n of oil and gas do not constitute "significan­t effects" of the project.

"It is the effect of the project, and its operation, that is to be considered and not that of the consumptio­n of any retailed product ultimately emerging as a result of a refinement of the raw material," he stated.

"It would not be practicabl­e, in an assessment of the environmen­tal effects of a project for the extraction of fossil fuels, for the decision maker to conduct a wide ranging examinatio­n into the effects, local or global, of the use of that fuel by the final consumer.

"Although [Greenpeace's] aspiration is for such extraction to cease, it does not appear to be contended that the UK economy is not still reliant in a number of different ways on the consumptio­n of oil and gas.

"At present, a shortage of oil and gas supplies is a matter of public concern.

"The argument is, in any event, an academic one.

"It is not maintained that the exploitati­on of the Vorlich field would increase, or even maintain, the current level of consumptio­n.

"Unless it did so, it is difficult to argue that it would have any material effect on climate change; even if it is possible to arrive at a figure for its contributi­on by arithmetic­al calculatio­n relative to the production of oil and gas overall. The Secretary of State's submission that these are matters for decision at a relatively high level of Government, rather than either by the court or in relation to one oilfield project, is correct.”

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