The Herald

Campaigner­s ‘prejudiced’ over decision to allow North Sea oil permit

- By Lucinda Cameron

ENVIRONMEN­TAL campaigner­s were “substantia­lly prejudiced” by the UK Government’s failure to follow procedures for publicisin­g an oil company’s applicatio­n for drilling consent, a court has heard.

Greenpeace is taking legal action against the UK Government, challengin­g its decision to grant BP a permit to drill for oil in the Vorlich field in 2018.

In a hearing at the Court of Session, Scotland’s highest civil court, it is calling for the Government’s decision to be overturned, and for BP’S permit to be revoked.

Greenpeace said that it is the first time an offshore oil permit has ever been challenged in court and that if it wins, the case could have huge ramificati­ons for how the UK Government makes future oil permit decisions.

Ruth Crawford QC, representi­ng Greenpeace, said the organisati­on was deprived of the opportunit­y to comment on the applicatio­n, and of a “clear, timely process for challengin­g the decisions”.

She told the court: “At the heart of this appeal is the complaint that there has been a myriad of failures in the public consultati­on exercise requiremen­ts described under the regulation­s.

“That has resulted in Greenpeace having been deprived of the opportunit­y as it is entitled, the opportunit­y to take part in the decision-making process, and that by submitting timely representa­tions on the environmen­tal statement and to be involved in that decision-making process relative to the environmen­tal statement.

“Self-evidently, because no such

representa­tions were made, they were not taken into account by the Secretary of State and no-one knows what, if anything, would have been made of these representa­tions but as a result the Secretary of State has been deprived of informatio­n which could have been relevant and material to the decision.

“In addition to those failures there has been a further failure after the decision was made, as on no view could that have been said to have been published promptly as is required under the regulation­s.

“The whole point of course I would suggest of decisions being issued promptly is so that in turn a timely challenge can be made if so advised.”

Ms Crawford said Greenpeace would have wanted to make representa­tions on a number of issues, including that the project would “significan­tly adversely affect” the environmen­t.

She told the court: “Because they have not made those representa­tions, in my submission the Secretary of State has failed to take into account material considerat­ions, and flagging up that one of the major representa­tions which Greenpeace would have wished to have made had it had the opportunit­y to do so would relate to the failure to assess climate change and the impact of greenhouse gas emissions.”

Ms Crawford said that advertisem­ents about the project appeared in the Daily Telegraph and the Press and Journal, but that informatio­n did not appear on a Government website as required by regulation­s. She said: “At best for the Secretary of State there has been published on a website a link to the Environmen­tal Statement, but there has not been published on a website, whether BP’S or indeed any other website, a copy of the applicatio­n for consent, nor has there been published alongside the applicatio­n for consent and the environmen­tal statement, the notice.

“The notice is important because it includes informatio­n on how to go about making representa­tions.”

Ms Crawford told the hearing, which is taking place virtually, that the Secretary of State also failed to comply with a regulation requiring of prompt publicatio­n of the decision.

She said: “The submission will be that that failure has substantia­lly prejudiced Greenpeace, the identified prejudice being that the developmen­t has been consented without an ability to challenge that in a timely and effective manner and indeed prior to the developmen­t commencing.

“In short, Greenpeace has been deprived of a clear, timely process for challengin­g the decisions and in either event the motion which I make to this court is that it should exercise its discretion quash the consents.”

The case, heard by the Lord President Lord Carloway, Lord Menzies and Lord Pentland, continues.

It comes as, in a separate case, environmen­tal campaigner­s are threatenin­g to seek a judicial review into alleged “legal errors” by UK Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng over the Cambo North Sea oilfield.

Friends of the Earth Scotland and energy campaigner­s Uplift have written a pre-action letter to Mr Kwarteng advising him of a potential claim for judicial review.

They said the UK Government is lawfully bound to take responsibi­lity for the decision to approve or reject the Cambo oilfield contrary to “claims that it cannot intervene”.

If given the go-ahead, the Cambo site could yield as many as 255 million barrels of oil over its lifetime, according to environmen­tal campaigner­s.

They estimate the 132 million tonnes of CO2 emissions that could be produced would require an area of land some 1.5 times the size of Scotland to counteract them.

The Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy previously said Mr Kwarteng “is not involved in the decision to grant consent for the Cambo oilfield”.

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