Fracking Comes to the UK for First Time in Five Years Despite Concerns Over Gas Leaks and Safety Breaches

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Yorkshire district Ryedale will be โ€œdevastatedโ€ and โ€œchanged forever,โ€ campaigners warned Monday evening, after county councillors gave the go-ahead for the first fracking tests in the UK in fiveย years.

North Yorkshire County Council on 23 May approved Third Energyโ€™s plans to frack for shale gas at its existing well in Kirby Misperton, known as KM8, following two days of deliberations andย representations.

The decision rides roughshod over a litany of concerns about gas leaks and safety breaches, as well thousands ofย objections.

Nicky Mason, resident of nearby Great Habton, broke the story atย last Fridayโ€™sย planning committee meeting about an unreported gas leak at Third Energy’s Malton 4 well-site in November 2015. Around 70,000 cubic metres of gas were subsequently released at the Knapton Generatingย Station.

Third Energy breached its permit by failing to report the leak to the Environment Agency when it shouldย have.

Ms Mason said: โ€œThis is just the latest in a succession of problems experienced by Third Energy and their ageing infrastructure which have been previouslyย documented.

โ€œWe all know that Hydraulic Fracturing brings a substantially higher level of risk than current conventional gas operations, and these are to beย self-regulated.โ€

In 2008 the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) wrote a scathing review of a pipeline operated by Third Energy (then known as Viking UK Gas Ltd). It was particularly concerned about โ€œcontinuing poor standardsโ€ and โ€œunresolvedย failuresโ€.

And in 2014 Third energy staff detected a leak of sour gas, which is extremely poisonous even in smallย quantities.

Fightย On

The councilโ€™s decision sweeps aside the long and bitter campaign fought by the local community and environmentalists to keep Ryedaleย frack-free.

North Yorkshire County Council had received 4,375 objections โ€“ compared to just 36 statements in support โ€“ and impassioned pleas to reject the plans from the likes ofย Sir Richard Storey, a local landowner, andย Flamingo Land, a tourist attraction and largeย employer.

All five town councils and Ryedale District Council had passed anti-fracking motions. But earlier this month the councilโ€™s own officers recommended the plans for approval and today the Conservative majority Planning and Regulatory Functions Committee voted through Third Energyโ€™s plans, with a majority of seven votes toย four.

However, campaigners Monday evening vowed to โ€œfight onโ€ despite the council having bowed to government pressure to approve theย tests.

Russell Scott, a spokesperson for Frack Free Ryedale, said: โ€œIt doesn’t end here. We will appeal. The fight has to go on โ€“ fracking would be devastating for thisย area.

โ€œThe authorities must listen to the will of the people: 99 per cent opposed the plans โ€“ that says it all. Nobody is forย it!โ€

He added: โ€œThird Energy has never hydraulically fracked in its life. And the process is inherently risky anyway โ€“ the industryโ€™s own stats tell you these wells will leak eventually. Pumping pressure into the ground at high pressure constantly for years – to suggest that would have no impact isย impossible.โ€

Mr Scott rejected accusations that protesters against fracking were โ€˜NIMBYs,โ€™ saying: โ€œThat isnโ€™t the case. We have made commitments to meet climate change targets and reduce fossil fuelย consumption.

โ€œHow can you tackle that by opening up even more extreme forms of fuelย extraction?โ€

โ€˜Changeย Foreverโ€™

Third Energy has said it helps support local businesses, currently employs more than 20 staff locally and supports local grassrootsย sports.

But Mr Scott remains unconvinced of the benefits or fracking, warningย Ryedale would โ€œchange foreverโ€ if the plans to frack goย ahead.

He said: โ€œThe pattern in America shows fracking does not create much local employment, only short term jobs. The energy companies just drill a well and move on. All the while jobs in farming and agriculture areย damaged.โ€

Of the decision, North Yorkshire County Council said: โ€œThe planning committee is satisfied that in this particular application, mitigation of the effects of the development with regard to safeguarding the natural environment, protected species and habitats, the amenity of local residents, the protection of ground and surface water quality and traffic management can be achieved through the discharge of the planningย conditions.โ€

Richard Flinton, North Yorkshireโ€™s chief executive, said: โ€œWe are proud of our beautiful county which attracts so many visitors and maintains a thriving tourism industry. We have no intention of jeopardising those qualities and our rural industries and livelihoods. For that reason the planning conditions must be fully discharged andย monitored.โ€

Third Energy did not respond to a request forย comment.

Inย Context

The move paves the way for the first shale gas exploration in Britain since 2011, when tests in Lancashire were believed to have caused minor tremors in the area. A ban was temporarily based on fracking but lifted the followingย year.

In 2013 Third Energy drilled an exploratory well near the village of Kirby Misperton, close to the North York Moors Nationalย Park.

Now it has the green light to frack the well to test whether it can unlock shale gas from rocks up to 3,000mย underground.

Fracking is the process of drilling down into the earth and injecting shale rock with a high-pressure mixture of water, sand and chemicals to release the gasย inside.

Photo by Guy Shrubsole, Friends of theย Earth

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Victoria Seabrook writes about climate change, the criminal justice system, and social justice. She is news editor at independent local newspaper Hackney Citizen and co-editor of Prison Watch UK.

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