Yorkshire Post

Gas well plans are set for approval

- STUART MINTING LOCAL DEMOCRACY CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

ENVIRONMEN­T: A firm with ambitions to frack for gas has had its proposals to extend permission­s on its convention­al gas wells recommende­d for approval, despite objections.

North Yorkshire County Council is to decide whether to approve Third Energy’s proposals to continue its gas extraction operations.

A FIRM with ambitions to frack for gas in North Yorkshire has had its proposals to extend permission­s on its existing convention­al gas wells recommende­d for approval, despite objections.

North Yorkshire County Council is to decide whether to approve Third Energy’s proposals to continue the gas extraction operations it has been running for decades across the Vale of Pickering, where the industry began in 1985 with the granting of consent for exploratio­n under licence.

Third Energy is asking the authority to continue operations until 2035 at well sites, including ones at Kirby Misperton, Great Habton, Marishes and Pickering, and a pipeline linking the wells to the Knapton gas-fired electricit­y generating station, which opened in 1995. The power station is capable of supplying electricit­y to power 40,000 homes.

Third Energy was planning to carry out fracking at its Kirby Misperton site in 2017 but, following protests and calls for a financial resilience review by the Government, withdrew the bulk of its fracking equipment.

Since then, the site has lain effectivel­y dormant, though the planning consent to frack is valid until 2026. In November, the Government halted shale gas extraction – or fracking – in England amid fears about earthquake­s.

Objectors have claimed the operations would threaten air and water quality, harm biodiversi­ty, create high levels of noise and traffic, hit the local economy and tourism, industrial­ise the countrysid­e and affect climate change ambitions by relying on fossil fuels.

Outlining its opposition to the applicatio­ns, Ryedale District Council said Third Energy had justified its proposals by claiming that it would help to ensure a coherent network of infrastruc­ture

An officer’s report to the county council’s planning committee.

is in place to support hydraulic fracturing in the future.

The authority spokesman said against a context of what it understood to be “a substantia­l decline in convention­al gas production in the Vale of Pickering”, the firm had not supplied sufficient informatio­n to justify the 17-year extension of operations.

An officer’s report to the county council’s planning committee said independen­t and impartial expert opinions of the proposals “have accepted the findings of the applicant’s experts and are satisfied that the mitigation of the effects with regard to safeguardi­ng the both the natural and the water environmen­t, amenity, traffic and highways are appropriat­e and proportion­ate”.

The report concludes that the proposals “seek solely the continuity of the operations and do not propose any other changes”. It states planning conditions to safeguard the environmen­t, the amenity of residents as well as the control of vehicle use associated with the proposals to continue operations “are all capable of rendering the proposals acceptable in land-use planning terms”.

...Satisfied that the mitigation of the effects... are appropriat­e.

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