‘Gung-ho’ fracking sparks veto row
Minister criticises UK approach
SCOTLAND’S energy minister has complained to the UK Government about “gung-ho” plans to remove the right of Scots to object to fracking beneath their homes.
Proposals from the UK Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) will allow companies to drill for unconventional oil and gas below residential areas without first negotiating access rights.
The new plans will give automatic rights of access for drilling only at depths of 300 metres or more.
But Fergus Ewing has said powers over unconventional oil and gas exploration should lie with Holyrood not Westminster, so Scots can consider the issues in “an evidence-based, cautious and considered” way.
“All of the decisions taken about it should be taken by the people of Scotland, through the parliament and government they elected,” he said.
“UK Government proposals to remove the right of Scottish householders to object to drilling under their homes flies in the face of that approach and that is why we object to them. It is also fundamentally an issue affecting land ownership rights.
“The gung-ho approach of the UK Government to the issue of unconventional oil and gas, often without any consultation with the Scottish Government at all, contrasts with our approach.”
Fracking, or hydraulic fracturing, is the controversial process of extracting gas and oil from shale rock by injecting a mixture of water and chemicals at high pressure into boreholes drilled deep into the earth. Environmental campaigners welcomed the objection, which they say sends a “very clear message” to the fracking industry and “puts a spoke in the works” for the UK Government’s drive to maximise the potential of unconventional oil and gas.
Friends of the Earth Scotland director Dr Richard Dixon said: “We are delighted that the Scottish Government is saying no to UK Government plans to remove people’s rights to stop, or even be notified about, shale gas fracking underneath their homes. The UK Government is falling over itself to get fracking going.
“All credit to Scottish ministers for having more respect for Scottish communities.
“The Scottish Government’s more cautious approach to unconventional gas extraction is good news for the people of Scotland and bad news for any operators hoping to make a quick buck before the shale bubble bursts.”
Affected communities would receive a one-off £20,000 payment for each horizontal well of more than 200m in length. A three-month consultation on the proposals was launched in May by Michael Fallon, the then business and energy minister for the UK.
Mr Ewing
said:
“Whatever your view on the issue of unconventional oil and gas – and it is clear that there are both opportunities and concerns – there is only one way that the people of Scotland can determine the approach in Scotland.
“That is to take the power to deal with this issue away from Westminster, and that can only be done with the powers of independence.”