The Scotsman

Fracking court battle cost government £ 175k

- By LEWIS MCKENZIE

A legal challenge by a petrochemi­cals firm over an effective ban on fracking cost the Scottish Government around £ 175,000, according t o f i gures obtained via a Freedom of Informatio­n ( FOI) request.

Ministers were taken to court last year by Ineos and Aberdeen f i rm Reachcsg, who were seeking a judicial review of the government’s preferred policy position of not supporting unconventi­onal oil and gas developmen­t.

Following t he hearing, a judge ruled that as a matter of law there is no prohibitio­n against fracking in Scotland.

That was i n c o nt r a s t t o Nicola Sturgeon’s comments in Holyrood in October 2017 after the government had stated its moratorium outlawing the practice would be permanentl­y extended.

Ms Sturgeon declared at the time: “Fracking is being banned in Scotland, end of story. There will be no fracking in Scotland. I don’t think that position could be any clearer.”

The Court of Session ruled while there had been “ministeria­l statements to the effect that there is an effective ban”, the Government had accepted this “did not accurately reflect the legal position”.

According to a FOI request by the Scottish Conservati­ves, the total cost incurred by the Government to pay for external legal advice for the case amounted to £ 173,928.

An extra £ 1,200 was spent on court fees. Scottish Tories energy spokesman Alexander Burnett accused the Government of blowing public money on an “entirely avoidable” case. He said: “The SNP deliberate­ly misled the people of Scotland by saying there was a fracking ban – something even its own lawyers admitted was a nonsense.”

 ??  ?? 0 Nicola Sturgeon spoke of a ban in 2017
0 Nicola Sturgeon spoke of a ban in 2017

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