The Guardian (USA)

Cumbria mine: what will the public inquiry look at?

- Tommy Greene

A public inquiry is to be held into plans for the UK’s first new deep coalmine in decades after the communitie­s secretary “called in” the decision on the project, taking it out of the hands of local government. Facing a legal challenge, Robert Jenrick reversed his decision not to intervene in the dispute, having previously said it was a local matter. In his decision, he cited new climate change advice and rising controvers­y over the plans, following vocal criticism from government scientific advisers and leading scientists.

The case has a recent precedent: a similar call-in decision was made in 2019 by Jenrick’s predecesso­r, James Brokenshir­e, over plans for an opencast mine at Druridge Bay in Northumber­land.

Jenrick finally rejected the scheme last autumn, 18 months after Brokenshir­e’s decision. Cumbria county council will sit alongside the firm bringing the applicatio­n, West Cumbria Mining, and local campaign group South Lakeland Against Climate Change as the main bodies submitting evidence to the public inquiry. Although “landscape considerat­ions” took precedence over climate concerns in the Druridge Bay inquiry, campaigner­s say they are hopeful that the government’s climate commitment­s will be central to the Cumbria inquiry. The Committee on Climate Change, the government’s statutory advisers, urged a 78% cut in the UK’s carbon emissions by 2035 in order to meet the government’s legally binding target of net-zero emissions by 2050.

Supporters of the mine argue that extracting coking coal in west Cumbria will reduce domestic industry’s reliance on imported coal, thus cutting carbon emissions that they say the UK “outsources” to other countries at present.But campaigner­s say the 2.7m tonnes of coking coal that would be extracted each year from beneath the Irish Sea will greatly exceed the projected domestic demand for the resource, with just 360,000 tonnes – about 15% of the total – expected to be supplied to UK-based firms. In a letter to the county council announcing the decision, the Department of Communitie­s, Housing and Local Government advised that Jenrick “particular­ly wishes to be informed about” how the mining plans would square with the government’s climate change commitment­s, along with policy on the sustainabl­e use of minerals and sustainabl­e developmen­t in the area.Jenrick will be entitled not to follow the planning inspector’s recommenda­tion once it is made. How

ever, campaigner­s say he may leave himself open to legal challenge if he is considered to have ignored the inspector’s findings.The inquiry is set to take place in early summer and is expected to last about two weeks. Its conclusion­s, and a subsequent government decision, may not be forthcomin­g until next year. Environmen­tal campaigner­s hope the decision’s proximity to the Cop26 UN climate summit, which the UK is hosting in November, may sway the government’s decision, with intensive lobbying expected from both camps.Anne Harris, of Coal Action Network, said Jenrick’s failure to take a clear climate stance in the Druridge Bay case has led to complicati­ons in approachin­g the Cumbrian scheme.“In the Druridge decision, following a public inquiry in 2017, the secretary of state dodged the question of whether extracting more coal leads to more coal being consumed, and thus greater amounts of greenhouse gases being released,” she said.“This time he cannot avoid taking a position on this issue. The future of our planet depends on politician­s and companies acting to dramatical­ly limit the release of gases which cause climate change. “If Jenrick had been strong in taking a stance against the Druridge applicatio­n on climate change grounds, it is possible that this applicatio­n in Cumbria would never have been approved.” Meanwhile, the former government climate change representa­tive, John Ashton, said the wording of Jenrick’s call-in letter this week was “a disgrace: a farrago of false trails, obfuscatio­n, and low-grade thinking and drafting … In any case, this welcome decision is about crude climate politics and nothing else.”

Pressure on the UK on the global stage may also have affected the decision, he said, with many taking the view that the UK should be setting a good example internatio­nally as hosts of the crucial Cop26 climate conference.

“I imagine they will be telling … northern Tories to bide their time and press their case after [Cop26 in] Glasgow. I suspect that [US climate envoy] John Kerry on his visit the other day told Johnson to start getting his act together.”

 ??  ?? An artist’s impression of the controvers­ial coalmine planned for near Whitehaven in Cumbria. Photograph: West Cumbria Mining Company
An artist’s impression of the controvers­ial coalmine planned for near Whitehaven in Cumbria. Photograph: West Cumbria Mining Company

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States