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The Herald Scotland
By Paul Hutcheon, Investigations Editor
February 15 2017
A MULTI-NATIONAL company behind plans to bring
fracking to Scotland has been awarded over £16 million by the country’s jobs quango
in the last eight years.
The sums given to Ineos – the equivalent of nearly
£180,000 a month – have sparked concerns that the Government has invested too
much in the company to reject fracking entirely.
Ineos, which was founded by billionaire tycoon Jim
Ratcliffe, acquired the sprawling oil refinery and petrochemical plant at
Grangemouth in 2005.
The facility employs around 1,300 people and is
estimated to contribute to nearly four per cent of Scotland’s GDP.
However, a 60 per cent decline in gas production from
the North Sea saw the company decide to source ethane from outside the UK as
part of an attempt to modernise its business.
Ineos also wants to be the driver in establishing a
homegrown fracking industry in Scotland – the controversial process that
involves drilling into the earth onshore in an attempt to release shale gas.
The SNP Government slapped a moratorium on fracking
amid public and environmental concerns and commissioned research into the
practice.
Ministers will consult further on the evidence
gathered and intend to make a decision on fracking by the end of the year.
According to figures obtained by this newspaper, the
public investment in Ineos Chemicals Grangemouth Limited – a company subsidiary
– has been vast.
In 2009, Ineos was awarded £7.6m by Scottish
Enterprise as part of the KG Flex project that is said to have secured jobs at
the plant. The sum has been handed over in full.
In 2013/14, the jobs quango awarded the same company
£9m to help establish a processing capacity to handle and deliver imported
ethane from the US. The grant is handed over in instalments.
When the shipments from the US arrived at the new
ethane facility, Friends of the Earth Scotland campaigns chief Mary Church
said: "The fact that Scottish public money is tied up in this project is
disgraceful. Setting aside the devastating local impacts of fracking, the
climate consequences of extracting yet more fossil fuels are utterly
disastrous."
Mark Ruskell, a Scottish Greens MSP, has now expressed
concern at the level of Government support for Ineos: “On any given day, we
might hear the SNP talk about the Scottish Government’s ‘world-leading’ climate
change targets, the next it might be boasting of its plans to cosy up to the
airlines by giving the aviation industry a tax cut. And the revelations of this
investment further shows the Scottish Government is all over the place when it
comes to its environmental policies."….
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