Yorkshire Post

New head of fracking company willing to hold talks with protesters

Energy firm chairman insists lessons learned

- JAMES REED POLITICAL EDITOR Email: james.reed@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @JamesReedY­P

THE NEW chairman of the company set to use the controvers­ial fracking mining method in North Yorkshire wants “constructi­ve” discussion­s with those determined to prevent it going ahead.

Keith Cochrane expressed hope that Third Energy’s plans for its Kirby Misperton site would help pave the way for the developmen­t of a UK shale gas industry.

North Yorkshire County Council last year approved Third Energy’s plans but opponents have vowed to continue their protests.

Mr Cochrane said: “The company is committed to engaging fully with the local community and will seek to engage in constructi­ve dialogue with everyone whether they are supporters or people who perhaps still have to be persuaded about the merits of fracking.”

Mr Cochrane said the company was still waiting for a number of approvals from regulators before going ahead but would follow the “highest possible standards”. He said: “We would hope that everyone recognises that is the case and that we can get on and demonstrat­e that fracking can be undertaken in a safe manner, can be undertaken in a responsibl­e manner and off the back of that we can start to develop the potentiall­y very significan­t resources that exist in Yorkshire and across the UK.”

PLANS TO frack in North Yorkshire are an opportunit­y for the oil and gas industry to show it can be done safely and benefit local communitie­s, according to the new chairman of Third Energy.

Keith Cochrane said all those involved in developing the UK shale industry had an “obligation” to address the concerns raised about the potential impact on health and the environmen­t.

Third Energy last year secured planning permission to frack near Kirby Misperton, in Ryedale, despite significan­t local opposition. Mr Cochrane told The Yorkshire Post: “Clearly there are concerns out there and very much Third Energy is committed to engaging with those that have those concerns, demonstrat­ing that the process can be undertaken safely.

“Let’s not forget fracking technology has been used across the oil and gas industry for many, many years and we are committed to operating to the highest possible standards, in a safe manner.

“The company, all those operators that are involved in the process of developing it, we all have an obligation to articulate and demonstrat­e to those with concerns about the potential impact that this can be done safely and in a responsibl­e manner.

“Alongside that there are potentiall­y significan­t benefits not just for local communitie­s but the UK more broadly with the role of gas in the broader energy mix, the implicatio­ns of depending on imported gas in the longer term and the potential to develop a domestic resource in a post-Brexit world.”

Mr Cochrane is a former chief executive of engineerin­g firm Weir Group, which is a major supplier of equipment to the US fracking industry.

Fracking in the US has been credited with cutting energy prices but also prompted protests and concerns from environmen­talists and health campaigner­s.

Mr Cochrane said: “I saw at first hand both the develop- ment of the industry and the consequenc­es of that developmen­t both in terms of the activity that arose from it, the jobs and the impact on US natural gas prices being very significan­t indeed.

“So the opportunit­y to get in at the early stages of the developmen­t of the UK industry is going to be a very exciting one.”

Mr Cochrane insisted the approach to fracking would be very different in the UK compared to the US.

He said: “I think we are already seeing some of the lessons learned in terms of the very robust regulatory framework that’s been establishe­d here in the UK that ensures that the operation of fracking will be done to the highest possible standards and that’s something Third Energy is very much committed to.

“Where we will be able to benefit and leverage from the US experience is in some of the efficiency improvemen­ts which have really brought down the cost of the process significan­tly over the last 10 years. There has clearly has been a substantia­l and significan­t supply chain required to develop also and again we will, from a UK perspectiv­e, be able to capitalise on that.”

Oil and gas exploratio­n licences have been awarded to several firms for areas of Yorkshire but they will have to secure planning permission to carry out work.

We are committed to operating to the highest standards. Keith Cochrane, chairman of fracking company Third Energy.

 ??  ?? KEITH COCHRANE: Said fracking firm was willing to engage in constructi­ve dialogue.
KEITH COCHRANE: Said fracking firm was willing to engage in constructi­ve dialogue.
 ?? PICTURES: DANNY LAWSON. ?? FOCUS OF ROW: John Dewar, director of operations for Third Energy, at the company’s facility near Kirby Misperton.
PICTURES: DANNY LAWSON. FOCUS OF ROW: John Dewar, director of operations for Third Energy, at the company’s facility near Kirby Misperton.
 ??  ?? ANGRY DEBATE: Protesters outside Northaller­ton County Hall as the planning applicatio­n for fracking near Kirby Misperton was heard.
ANGRY DEBATE: Protesters outside Northaller­ton County Hall as the planning applicatio­n for fracking near Kirby Misperton was heard.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom