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OIL AND GAS
Blow to British fracking as drilling plans rejected
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) June 29, 2015


British shale gas campaign hits wall
Preston, England (UPI) Jun 29, 2015 -British shale pioneer Cuadrilla Resources suffered a setback with a committee in Lancashire County voting to refuse their application for a fracking campaign.

"This is one of the biggest planning decisions ever put before Lancashire County Council," Marcus Johnstone, cabinet member for environment and planning, said in a statement.

The council voted to refuse a permit to start a hydraulic fracturing campaign in the Preston New Road area of the county. The council said it refused the application because of noise and visual impact concerns.

Furqan Naeem, a campaigner for British advocacy group Friends of the Earth, said the council showed courage amid pressure from Cuadrilla and the British government.

"People in Lancashire and across the U.K. who have been tirelessly campaigning against fracking will breathe a sigh of relief today, safe in the knowledge that this dirty industry that risks health, quality of life and the climate, has been stopped in its tracks once again," he said in a statement.

The council last week voted to refuse a permit to Cuadrilla to use hydraulic fracturing in the Roseacre Wood site in the region. The members said the work would have "an unacceptable and potentially severe impact" on road infrastructure and traffic itself.

The company estimates there may be as much as 200 trillion cubic feet of shale natural gas in Lancashire. In a statement, Cuadrilla said it completed the most comprehensive environmental impact assessment of its kind in preparation for the drilling campaign. A "no" vote, it said, is a vote against more jobs and a better economy.

"We are surprised and disappointed that Lancashire County Council's Development Control Committee has denied planning consent for our application to explore for shale gas at Preston New Road," the company said.

The British government in 2012 enacted new restrictions on hydraulic fracturing, ending a moratorium enforced after minor tremors were reported near Lancashire drilling sites. In January, the British Geological Survey announced plans to conduct live monitoring of shale exploration in Lancashire.

Britain's hopes of expanding its shale gas industry suffered a blow Monday when local authorities rejected plans for an exploratory fracking site in northwest England following protests.

The application by energy firm Cuadrilla to begin fracking in Lancashire had met fierce resistance from environmental campaigners and local residents, who cheered Monday's decision when it was announced at a local council meeting.

Cuadrilla said it was "surprised and disappointed" and was considering appealing the ruling, which follows the rejection last week of its plans to frack at another site in the area.

"We remain committed to the responsible exploration of the huge quantity of natural gas locked up in the shale rock deep underneath Lancashire," the firm said in a statement.

Cuadrilla had hoped to drill four wells and undertake exploratory drilling for shale gas at a site in Little Plumpton, a small village close to the coastal town of Blackpool.

But Lancashire county councillors voted against the proposals, on the grounds of their impact on the landscape and noise, despite recommendations by planning officers to approve the plans.

The application, including a 4,000 page environmental statement, had undergone intense scrutiny and public consultation since being submitted more than a year ago.

The outcome is a setback for Prime Minister David Cameron's government which has pledged to go "all out for shale", claiming it would increase energy security, keep prices down and create jobs.

Cameron hopes to replicate the success of the US fracking industry but has faced opposition protests in many parts of the country.

Opponents fear that the process -- which involves pumping water, chemicals and sand at high pressure underground to extract gas -- would pollute water supplies, scar the countryside, and trigger earthquakes.

Fracking campaigners outside Preston town hall celebrated in the streets when they heard Monday's decision, chanting "Frack Free Lancashire" and uncorking bottles of champagne.

Greenpeace UK energy and climate campaigner Daisy Sands said: "This decision is a Waterloo for the fracking industry and a triumph for local democracy. It's also a huge boost for efforts to kick the UK's addiction to dangerous fossil fuels."


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