Yorkshire Post

Fracking inquiries to start in weeks

Lawyers for petrochemi­cal firm Ineos are preparing for two landmark public inquiries as the company looks to kick-start shale gas exploratio­n work in the south of the region as soon as possible.

- Chris Burn reports.

ENVIRONMEN­T: Two planning inquiries to fast-track plans for fracking in the south of the region are to start preliminar­y hearings within weeks.

Petrochemi­cals giant Ineos is understood to be the first company involved in the shale gas industry to be granted the right to bypass local councils.

TWO FLAGSHIP planning inquiries to fast-track plans for fracking in the south of the region are to start preliminar­y hearings within weeks.

Petrochemi­cals giant Ineos is understood to be the first company involved in the shale gas industry to be granted the right to bypass local councils ruling on planning applicatio­ns for fracking exploratio­n work in favour of a Government inspector determinin­g the case.

Public inquiries have been ordered for shale gas exploratio­n work in two Ineos sites less than ten miles apart in Rotherham and north-east Derbyshire. Should the tests on undergroun­d wells to determine their suitabilit­y for fracking prove successful, it could pave the way for the controvers­ial process – which involves the injection of water and chemicals at high pressure into rocks deep undergroun­d to release shale gas – to begin permanentl­y in the region.

Both Rotherham Council and Derbyshire County Council had been due to make decisions on the applicatio­ns after receiving thousands of objections to the exploratio­n plans from the public – but Ineos asked the Government to intervene on the grounds the council processes were taking too long, and now the Planning Inspectora­te is due to hold hearings.

Rother Valley MP Kevin Barron, whose constituen­cy includes the intended Rotherham site, has accused Ineos of “bypassing local democracy” in its use of the new powers.

He told The Yorkshire Post: “The Conservati­ve manifesto was about localism and giving over powers. But now we are not going to have a voice at the beginning of this process.”

The Labour MP added while he was not against the principle of fracking, he does not believe it is suitable in the more urban environmen­t of Rotherham.

“I haven’t been saying no to it from the start. I have sat down with Ineos and hundreds of my constituen­ts and have looked into it in some depth before coming to these conclusion­s.”

He said local people are concerned about the prospect of a repeat of the earth tremors recorded in Lancashire in 2011 which were linked to shale gas test drilling by the firm Cuadrilla, as well as the generation of extra traffic.

In a letter to Mr Barron in response to his concerns about the ordering of a public inquiry, Communitie­s Secretary Sajid Javid said earlier this month that denying the right to an appeal was “not a power that is within my gift”.

But he added: “As part of the appeals process, there will be opportunit­ies for local people to have their views taken into account. In addition, all representa­tions made during the planning applicatio­n will be taken into account.”

The first applicatio­n relates to a site in Harthill near Rotherham. A pre-inquiry hearing will take place on February 13, with a twoweek inquiry due to take place in Rotherham from April 24.

The second applicatio­n relates to a site close to the village of Marsh Lane, near Sheffield and on the Derbyshire-South Yorkshire border. A pre-inquiry hearing is scheduled for March 20 ahead of a two-week inquiry taking place from June 19.

Councillor­s on Rotherham Council’s planning board voted unanimousl­y to oppose Ineos’s Harthill applicatio­n last week; an advisory decision that will be passed to the public inquiry.

Derbyshire Council’s planning committee is to meet next week to discuss the Marsh Lane applicatio­n. A council officer has recommende­d the developmen­t is viewed as acceptable on the grounds that strict planning controls relating to dust, ecology, the impact on roads and traffic, archaeolog­y, lighting and noise are put in place.

The coming public inquiries are expected to be a test case for future applicatio­ns to conduct fracking exploratio­n in Yorkshire and the rest of England and Wales. In August 2015, the Government announced shale gas applicatio­ns were to be “fasttracke­d”, giving councils a maximum of 16 weeks to determine a case.

The Marsh Lane and Harthill applicatio­ns were both submitted by Ineos in May but neither were determined within the threeand-a-half-month timeframe.

A Ministry of Housing, Communitie­s and Local Government spokesman said: “Ineos has appealed against Derbyshire County Council and Rotherham Metropolit­an District Council’s failure to come to a planning decision within legal deadlines. As the cases are ongoing, we cannot comment further.”

Ineos, which is one of seven companies with Government licences to start exploring for shale gas across Yorkshire, also submitted a third planning applicatio­n for work at another nearby site in Woodsetts, Rotherham, in November. Public consultati­on on those proposals is running until February 16.

In May 2016, North Yorkshire County Council gave the go-ahead to a company called Third Energy undertakin­g fracking for shale gas in the village of Kirby Misperton. Third Energy is awaiting Government approval of its financial accounts before imminently beginning test fracks.

In October 2016, the Government allowed an appeal by a gas firm Cuadrilla against Lancashire County Council’s decision to refuse permission for fracking work to take place at a site called Preston New Road.

The Government believes, despite environmen­talists’ concerns about the increased use of fossil fuels, as well as chemicals escaping and contaminat­ing groundwate­r, that “shale gas has the potential to provide the UK with greater energy security, growth and jobs”.

 ?? PICTURE: SIMON HULME. ?? DRILLING INQUIRY: The site of the proposed fracking site, Bramley Moor Road, Marsh Lane, Eckington.
PICTURE: SIMON HULME. DRILLING INQUIRY: The site of the proposed fracking site, Bramley Moor Road, Marsh Lane, Eckington.
 ??  ?? LOCAL VIEWS: Feelings are running high in Marsh Lane, Eckington, where a fracking operation has been proposed by Ineos.
LOCAL VIEWS: Feelings are running high in Marsh Lane, Eckington, where a fracking operation has been proposed by Ineos.

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