Fracking Company Cuadrilla Continues to Lose Millions, Accounts Show

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Despite the governmentโ€™s best efforts to boost the industry, fracking remains an expensive business in the UK.

Fracking company Cuadrilla operated at a ยฃ3.4m loss over the course of 2016, its latest accounts show. That makes the company about ยฃ1m less well-off than a year before, and returns it to the same level of loss it experienced inย 2014.

The accounts also show that Cuadrilla received ยฃ134,000 handout from UK taxpayers over 12 months in the form of taxย breaks.

Cuadrilla spent about ยฃ125,000 on leasing land for its various onshore fossil fuel projects, the documents show. About ยฃ46,000 of this was spent by Cuadrilla Bowland, the company set up to manage Cuadrillaโ€™s fracking operations at its Preston New Road site, its accountsย show.

It leases the land from local farmer John Wensley. The Times had previously speculated Wensley received between ยฃ30,000 and ยฃ50,000 a year renting his land to theย company.

The company currently employs 23 people, the documents reveal โ€” some way short of the 64,500 jobs Cuadrilla suggests could be created industry-wide on its website. Cuadrillaโ€™s directors received around ยฃ78,000 in remuneration lastย year.

โ€˜Irresponsible, Intimidatingย Behaviourโ€™

In the โ€œstrategic statementโ€ section of the accounts, Cuadrillaโ€™s CEO Francis Egan pulls no punches when talking about the protestors at the Preston New Roadย site.

He said Cuadrilla and its local partners โ€œremain engaged and undeterred despite the irresponsible, intimidating behaviour of a few activistsโ€, of which โ€œsadly a small minority are choosing to make their protestsย unlawfullyโ€.

According to Egan, the company is lucky to โ€œenjoy great support from the people of Lancashireโ€ and continues to โ€œengage closely with the Lancashire Police Force to ensure our operations are notย impededโ€.

The accounts suggest Cuadrilla believes its Preston New Road site is on schedule, despite the protests. It said fracking is expected to start โ€œtowards the end of this yearโ€, with the first gas flowing onto the grid โ€œin the first half ofย 2018โ€.

Reacting to the news, campaigner Dianne Westgarth from the Preston New Road Action Group told DeSmog UK:

โ€œOur homes are unmarketable and we are living in fear of what will happen to our livelihoods and communities: we’ve lost so much already, yet Cuadrilla have managed to gain handouts from our hard-earned taxes to fund a dirty industry we do not want or need. Any other company with such bad management and repeated losses would faceย liquidation.โ€

Complexย Ownership

The documents show Cuadrilla remains mainly owned by two foreignย companies.

US investors Riverstone/Carlyle Global Energy and Power Fund IV, a Cayman islands registered subsidiary of The Carlyle Group, own 45 percent of the company. The Carlyle Group famously profited handsomely from arms deals in the wake of the Iraqย war.

Australian mining company AJ Lucas also owns 45 percent ofย Cuadrilla.

In its 2016 preliminary final report, AJ Lucas hailed two โ€œvery positive developmentsโ€ in the UKโ€™s fracking industry โ€” the UK governmentโ€™s decision to use tax generated from fracking for community benefit schemes, and to its decision to allow companies to offer cash bribes to residents willing to allow fracking to go ahead in theirย area.

As the flowchart below shows, AJ Lucas is massively in debt to Kerogen Capital, a US investment company. Kerogenโ€™s environmental policy statement from 2014 supports the controversial idea that shale gas could be the answer to cutting emissions and tackling climateย change.

Campaigner Claire Stephenson from Frack Free Lancashire told DeSmog UK it was โ€œquite horrificโ€ that large sections of Cuadrillaโ€™s ownership was basedย offshore.

โ€œTheir undemocratic and forced-upon presence in Lancashire has caused immense grief and stress with residents. To learn that once again, this irresponsible and failure-ridden company, has made a loss, reassures me that they deserve no place in our community. Cuadrilla are unsustainable and insupportableโ€, sheย said.

Cuadrilla did not respond to repeated requests forย comment.

The Preston New Road site is one of two projects being managed by Cuadrilla in the Bowland shale area โ€“ the other is at Roseacreย Wood.

The ownership of the two sites is somewhat complicated, with UK energy giant Centrica also having a 25 percent stake in the projects, via AJย Lucas.

Cuadrillaโ€™s employees own the final 10 percent of the company which, given its multi-million pound losses each year, is perhaps not a great corporateย benefit.

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Mat was DeSmog's Special Projects and Investigations Editor, and Operations Director of DeSmog UK Ltd. He was DeSmog UKโ€™s Editor from October 2017 to March 2021, having previously been an editor at Nature Climate Change and analyst at Carbon Brief.

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