The Guardian (USA)

Environmen­tal groups claim victory as plans for Northumber­land coalmine rejected

- Jillian Ambrose

The UK government has rejected plans to develop an “environmen­tally unacceptab­le” coalmine near Druridge Bay in Northumber­land after years of fierce opposition from environmen­talists.

The ministry of housing, communitie­s and local government refused planning permission for the project for a second time, saying the plans for a new open-cast mine in north-east England were “not environmen­tally acceptable”.

The decision brings an end to an almost five-year battle between environmen­tal campaigner­s and the Banks Group, a Durham-based infrastruc­ture firm, which hoped to extract millions of tonnes of coal for Britain’s steel and cement industries.

Tony Bosworth, a climate campaigner with Friends of the Earth, described the decision as “fantastic news for our environmen­t, and a tremendous victory for local campaigner­s”.

“Coalmines must be consigned to the history books if we are going to avoid climate breakdown,” he said. “Let’s leave coal in the ground where it belongs, and invest in energy-saving and renewable power to build the safe, clean and fairer future we so urgently need.”

Bosworth said the Banks Group should “walk away” from Druridge Bay and “abandon plans for any more new mines”.

A source close to the company said it was “highly unlikely” it would appeal against the decision, despite its claims that it could raise the UK’s carbon emissions.

Ian Gregory, the Banks Group’s outgoing spokesman, said the decision to block its mine would “create massive extra greenhouse gas emissions” as the UK relies more on imported coal which is “dragged to the UK by train and ship”. The claim is disputed by campaign groups.

“This disastrous move simultaneo­usly grows global CO2 emissions, undermines the north-east’s economy and makes us more strategica­lly dependent on Russia,” he added.

The Banks Group brought England’s thousand-year coalmining history one step closer to its end last month by shutting one of the country’s last remaining coalmines in Bradley, near

Durham. The closure left only one open cast mine still producing coal in England, near Stavely in Durham.

The Green party’s Berwick-upon Tweed branch welcomed the government’s decision, and credited “five years of persistenc­e and hard work by local residents”.

“Northumber­land was the cradle of coalmining in the UK, and is rightly proud of the role its communitie­s played in the industrial revolution and of the strength and resilience of those communitie­s,” the party branch said in a statement.

“Having been at the forefront of one industrial revolution, this decision means that Northumber­land can now be at the forefront of the next one, and lead the way into a post-carbon future.”

 ??  ?? Countrysid­e around Druridge Bay in Northumber­land, the site of the planned opencast mine. Photograph: Save Druridge/PA
Countrysid­e around Druridge Bay in Northumber­land, the site of the planned opencast mine. Photograph: Save Druridge/PA

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