Nowhere is safe from fracking, including national parks and AONBs

MPs have voted to allow fracking for shale gas 1,200m below national parks and other protected sites.

The new regulations – which allow drilling from outside the protected areas – were approved by 298 to 261.

Opposition parties and campaigners criticised the lack of a Commons debate – and accused ministers of a U-turn as they previously pledged an outright ban on fracking in national parks.

The government said its plans would protect “our most precious landscapes”.

It said the UK had “one of the best track records in the world for protecting our environment while developing our industries”.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-35107203

Fracking: another set of goalposts move

Minister to decide over Lancashire fracking appeal

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-lancashire-34938891

but

KKR’s Samson Resources Files for Bankruptcy as Shale Slumps

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-09-17/kkr-s-samson-resources-files-for-bankruptcy-as-shale-slumps

Middle Eastern oil producers are pumping large amounts of oil, in order to reduce the price and drive out competition.

So, what will happen to the fledgling operation in Lancashire – especially as today ASDA announced that it will sell petrol at a price below £1 per litre?

Government trying to sneak through new fracking rules affecting National Parks, AONBs, SSSIs and World Heritage sites

“… The new regulations issued just weeks after the election say fracking would be allowed to take place below 1,200 metres in national parks, the broads, areas of outstanding natural beauty, world heritage sites and areas that are most vulnerable to groundwater pollution. To do this, fracking companies would have to drill down and sideways from outside protected areas. ”

SSSIs, conservation areas for wildlife and plants, would receive no protection under the regulations.

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/oct/27/ministers-accused-of-trying-to-sneak-through-new-fracking-rules

Fracking licenses threaten hundreds of our most important wildlife sites

“Hundreds more of England’s most important wildlife sites are now at risk from fracking after the government opened up 1,000 sq miles of land to the controversial technology, a new analysis has found.

Among the 159 licences issued last month to explore for oil and gas onshore in the UK – likely to include fracking for shale oil or gas – are 293 sites of special scientific interest (SSSI), the definition given to an area protecting rare species or habitats.

According to the RSPB, which compiled the list of SSSIs, the result could be significant damage to the UK’s remaining habitats for rare wildlife and plants.

Martin Harper, director of conservation at the charity, said the government had backtracked on its pledges to protect important habitats. “In February, Amber Rudd [energy and climate change secretary] specifically promised to ban fracking within all sites of special scientific interest, but this promise seems to have been forgotten,” he said.”

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/sep/16/new-wave-of-fracking-licences-threatens-hundreds-of-key-english-wildlife-sites

Crowd funding plea to get judicial review of fast-track fracking licenses

http://localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=24220:campaigners-to-raise-p20k-for-judicial-review-of-new-fracking-policy&catid=63&Itemid=31

Green Party quizzes Dorset MP on financial links to fracking on World Heritage Jurassic Coast

Green Party investigators quiz Local MP on his links to local fracking.

What does MP Burns do for £333 an hour? The Story behind the Private Eye Piece

You may have read the Private Eye piece which raised questions about whether Conor Burns’ vehement opposition to Navitus Bay was influenced by his close connections to Trant Engineering, an engineering company which maintains Fawley and Wytch Farm. You may have even read the Burns’ response to the article in the Echo where he completely avoided all of the issues raised, including his views on the further potential drilling for oil within the Jurassic coast by Infrastrata.

Does Burns still consider himself to be accountable to the electorate? He referred to the article as ‘mischievous’. It is, however, the duty of opposition parties to hold elected members to account and ask questions on behalf of their members and local people, which is what we did.

When Burns mentioned in parliament that he did consultancy work, local member, JR Ryan, checked the register of interests and found declared interests of £40000 a year for 10 hours work a month. He then wrote, under the Freedom of Information act, to the IPSO asking for details about the nature of the work and learnt that they do not hold that information. Writing to Burns himself, Ryan received a reply which was similar to that of the Echo response; it completely avoided all the questions put to him. Burns was adamant that he had complied, as far as was necessary, with the law as it stands in declaring the money earned. Interestingly, in his recent election campaign, Burns declared himself to be committed to honesty and transparency where finances are concerned. Most would consider that declaring earnings of £333 an hour from a petrochemical company for consultancy work but refusing to say what you do for that money could hardly be perceived as transparent.

Frustrated, Ryan then discussed the issue with other Green Party members and the decision was made to put the information into the hands of the public via the press. The story, complete with verifiable references, was handed over to journalist Lee Williams and published in Private Eye.

Upon reading Burns’ reply in the Echo, Ryan responded, outlining the background to the piece and posing other possible reasons as to why local MPs and councils may be objecting to Navitus Bay. One of which was the possibility that Navitus Bay may actually interfere with the siting of off shore oil and gas rigs. Burns has consistently voted against low carbon subsidies but is in favour of fracking. However, fracking fossil fuels within the World Heritage site, Ryan rightly points out will have far more negative effects to local tourism and the environment as a whole.

So, we ask once again, what do you do for your money Mr Burns and where do you stand on the expansion of drilling in Dorset?

The South East Dorset Green Party

Private Eye link:
http://www.dorseteye.com/east/articles/what-does-mp-burns-do-for-333-an-hour-the-story-behind-the-private-eye-piece

Dorset Echo link:
http://www.dorseteye.com/east/articles/what-does-mp-burns-do-for-333-an-hour-the-story-behind-the-private-eye-piece#sthash.37IB8Jmu.edaCXgSk.dpuf

Fracking being encouraged over wind power because it may bringbigger tax revenues?

Are onshore wind turbines – often in ones or twos on farming land – being thrown out so that the mega-business of fracking can reign supreme and provide the Treasury with vastly more tax income?

Some intriguing possibilities:

“If fracking yields ample supplies of gas (which is still an unknown), the Treasury will be relieved. The tax take from North Sea oil and gas tax has dropped by more than £6bn over three years and the Office of Budget Responsibility recently slashed its long-term North Sea revenue forecast by 94%. …

… Daisy Sands from Greenpeace said: “The contrast between [the government’s] view that local councils should be ‘masters of their own destiny’ and the new provisions announced today is staggering.

“Local residents could end up with virtually no say over whether their homes, communities and national parks are fracked or not.

“There is a clear double standard at play – the same government that is intent on driving through fracking at whatever cost has just given more powers to local councils to oppose wind farms, the cheapest source of clean energy. The government is riding rough-shod over democracy to industrialise our most beautiful landscapes and damage the climate. …”

So, wind farms not supplying enough tax to the Treasury but fracking looking much more lucrative.

Fracking to explode

Today’s Times newspaper:

…”Britain is set to fire up a big expansion of the fracking industry, handing out dozens of new drilling licences and fast-tracking planning decisions despite intense public opposition to the practice.

The Department for Energy and Climate Change will reveal next week the winners in an auction for dozens of shale gas exploration blocks, including swathes of southern England and heavily populated areas of Lancashire and the northeast.
About 95 companies are understood to have submitted bids for nearly 300 drilling licences, spanning more than 40 per cent of the UK’s land area. …”

Fracking consent to be fast- tracked to avoid local decisions

http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/news/uk_news/National/article1591432.ece

Anyone remember “localism”?

Fracking: get ready to rumble!

Honiton and Tiverton MP Neil Parish has said the government should do more to “get people behind fracking” (see earlier post). However, those in the fracking areas of Oklahoma might disagree:

http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jun/25/oklahoma-fracking-regulations-earthquakes

Neil Parish MP says the public should be encouraged to “buy into fracking”: Green MEP disagrees

“The new head of Parliament’s environment and rural affairs committee has urged ministers to do more to encourage people to “buy into” fracking.

Neil Parish, chairman of the Efra select committee and MP for Tiverton and Honiton, suggested the controversial practice would be “good for the country”. But he said it was important for the Government to demonstrate “tangible” benefits to local communities first in order to get their support.

His comments came during a Westminster debate in which he acknowledged there were no current plans to extract shale gas in Devon. But large areas of the Westcountry are open to applications, and the energy secretary is pushing for extraction to be permitted in national parks.

Mr Parish argued a “competitive and efficient” shale gas industry would be “good for the country”, adding that the UK could end up producing “a lot more” of the resource than expected. He qualified this by saying the gas “should not be brought out of the ground at any price” and recommending investment in infrastructure to ensure minimal disruption to communities and landscapes.

However, his comments drew criticism from Green MEP Molly Scott Cato, who said the Government’s approach to fracking was proof of its willingness “to prioritise corporations over people’s rights and their health”.”

Read more: http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Devon-MP-suggests-public-buy-idea-fracking/story-26822148-detail/story.html