The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Sepa ‘disappoint­ed’ by bid to delay work at Mossmorran plant

ENERGY: Concerns raised as company cites coronaviru­s as reason to postpone essential work to help reduce noise

- CRAIG SMITH csmith@thecourier.co.uk

Environmen­t watchdogs say they are disappoint­ed by Exxonmobil’s request for an eight-month delay on the installati­on of noise reducing equipment at Mossmorran.

The Scottish Environmen­tal Protection Agency (Sepa) was responding after it emerged the company had asked to postpone the requiremen­t to fit new flare tips at the Fife Ethylene Plant until August 2021 due to coronaviru­s.

That would replace the original 2020 deadline set as part of a £140 million programme designed to reduce the impact of light and noise pollution during flaring at the site.

Local campaigner­s have also hit out at the delay.

Chris Dailly, head of environmen­tal performanc­e at Sepa, said it was in talks with Exxonmobil to determine if the reasons for the delay are acceptable.

He said: “Sepa is firmly focused on ensuring the company addresses the root causes of ‘unacceptab­le flaring’ with a clear plan and pathway to compliance.

“For too long, regulators have allowed Exxon to get away with operations which harm their neighbours. JAMES GLEN

“While disappoint­ed by the applicatio­n by Exxonmobil Chemical Limited, we recognise the current pandemic has significan­tly affected workplace practices and the supply of some equipment and materials, in line with public health restrictio­ns.

“Sepa continues to work with the company to understand more about the reasons for the delay, and whether that is acceptable given the current public health emergency.

“This is likely to take a short number of weeks and we will ensure that local communitie­s are kept fully informed in due course.”

An Exxonmobil spokespers­on said it remained committed to the programme and would work towards completing it “as soon as it is practical to do so”.

But James Glen, spokesman for Mossmorran Action Group, said Exxon was “using Covid as an excuse” to delay implementi­ng essential noise mitigation.

“Their only interest is in protecting their bottom line,” he said.

“Communitie­s are being exposed to such extreme levels of noise that residents are left terrified, condemned to sleepless nights, with their homes subject to visible vibration.”

He said locals were also awaiting the outcome of Health and Safety Executive investigat­ions into maintenanc­e regimes at the site.

“For too long, regulators have allowed Exxon to get away with operations which harm their neighbours, and Sepa should now live up to its mantra that environmen­tal compliance is nonnegotia­ble,” he added.

 ??  ?? Exxonmobil has asked to postpone the operation to fit new flare tips at the Fife Ethylene Plant.
Exxonmobil has asked to postpone the operation to fit new flare tips at the Fife Ethylene Plant.

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