Campaigners Celebrate Government Rejection of Druridge Bay Coal Mine

Phoebe Cooke headshot - credit Laura King Photography
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Campaigners are celebrating a โ€œmassive victoryโ€ after plans to extract nearly three million tonnes of coal from Northumberlandโ€™s Druridge Bay were rejected onceย again.

Last night, Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick branded proposals for the UKโ€™s biggest mine as โ€œenvironmentallyย unacceptableโ€.

In an official letter, the government found the proposed development to extract 2.8 million tonnes of coal behind the dunes in Highthorn was โ€œnot likely to provide national, local or community benefitsโ€ that would outweigh its environmentalย impacts.ย 


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It comes after a nine-year battle by activists to protect the coastal stretch and wildlife hub fromย destruction.

The mine was first proposed by Durham-based developer Banks Group in 2015 for coal combustion at power stations, and approved by Northumberland County Council inย 2016.

But a public inquiry was sparked by campaign group Save Druridge and Friends of the Earth, leading to then Communities Secretary Sajid Javid rejecting the mine over climate change concerns inย 2018.

The decision was then returned to the new Communities Secretary after Banks successfully challenged the ruling in the High Court, before it was thrown out for a second timeย yesterday.

Banks has not yet ruled out an appeal to todayโ€™s decision, saying it would now โ€œreview the precise reasons for this decision before agreeing on the most appropriate steps toย takeโ€.

Victory

Campaigner Anne Harris of Coal Action Network told DeSmog: โ€œThis is a massive victory, itโ€™s absolutelyย brilliant.โ€

โ€œFor the local community, this means they can go out of their door and walk on the beach, and know theyโ€™ll be able to hear the wild birds, the wind on the sand dunes, the rolling of the waves, and not the noise of the opencastย mine.โ€

โ€œThat is such an important thing for those people who have fought so long. Their homes have been under threat, and their peace has been threatened by this company for a prolonged period of time. Hopefully this means that they can have that, that their fightโ€™s been worthย it.โ€

Friends of the Earth climate campaigner Tony Bosworth also welcomed todayโ€™s โ€œtremendous victoryโ€ for localย campaigners.

โ€œWith the world staring at catastrophic climate change, this is the right decision,โ€ he said. โ€œCoal mines must be consigned to the history books if we are going to avoid climateย breakdown.โ€ย 

โ€œItโ€™s time for Banks Mining to walk away from Druridge Bay and further legal challenges, and abandon plans for any more newย mines.โ€ย 

Gavin Styles, executive director at Banks Mining, said the developers were โ€œextremely disappointedโ€ by theย decision.

In a statement, he said: โ€œAt a time when our region and country is facing an unprecedented economic crisis, this decision effectively hands the much-needed and valued jobs of our North East workforce to Russian miners, who will be delighted to meet British industryโ€™s continuing need for coal whilst simultaneously significantly increasing global greenhouse gasย emissions.โ€

Banks made a similar argument when reacting to the rejection of Bradley Opencast in July, when plans to dig up an additional 90,000 tonnes of coal in County Durham were finallyย rejected.

Experts have previously disputed the claim that retaining coal mines in the UK is beneficial to the climate, because the opening of a coal mine does not mean others will close elsewhere and more mines lead to more coal being producedย overall.

The end ofย coal?

This decision is the latest victory in a year of successes for anti-coal campaigners, who are now hoping that the UKโ€™s last remaining opencast mining project in Dewley Hill, Newcastle, will also beย scrapped.

Alongside Bradley Opencast, two other Banks Group opencast mines have stopped producing coal in the past year โ€” Brenkley Lane and Shotton inย Northumberland.

There is also an application for an underground coking coal mine, Woodhouse Colliery, off the Whitehaven coast in Cumbria by West Cumbriaย Mining.

Mining coal for thermal power is now being phased out by the UK government by 2024, but Banks Group has continued to try to push through plans for metallurgical coal โ€” coking coal for steel โ€” for industrialย use.

Image credit:ย ยฉ Coal Action Network. Updated 09/09/20: A sentence on the criticism of Banks Group’s justification for opening UK coal mines was edited forย clarity.

Phoebe Cooke headshot - credit Laura King Photography
Phoebe joined DeSmog in 2020. She is currently co-deputy editor and was previously the organisation's Senior Reporter.

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