FRACKING: John Dewar Director of
Operations Third Energy, at the Third Energy facility near Kirby Misperton
where fracking has already been approved. Picture: DANNY LAWSON/PA WIRE
The Northern Echo
By Emily Flanagan
21 May, 2017
A CONSERVATIVE manifesto pledge to move some decisions
on fracking from local councils to national government could have implications
in North Yorkshire – where hundreds of square miles sit within areas licensed
for gas exploration.
The party has set out its intention to push forward
with fracking by reclassifying non-fracking drilling as a “permitted
development” which doesn’t require planning permission. It will also ensure
major decisions on fracking applications are made nationally, not by local
councils.
A new shale environmental regulator has been proposed,
along with alterations to the shale wealth fund so a greater percentage of tax
revenues from shale gas benefits affected communities.
Currently more than two dozen licences have been
issued for onshore exploration in North Yorkshire to companies including Ineos,
IGas and Third Energy.
Currently the Petroleum Exploration and Development
Licences (PEDLs) allow a company to carry out a range of oil and gas
exploration activities, subject to drilling or development consent and planning
permission. There are currently more than two dozen licences issued for gas
exploration in North Yorkshire, but the extent and commercial viability of
these sites will only be established once drilling begins.
Currently much of the eastern half of North Yorkshire
is covered by PEDL licences, from Easingwold, Kilburn and Ampleforth in the
west, to the Yorkshire coast, including York, Sheffield Hutton, Malton,
Helmsley and Scarborough.
Currently wells are allowed beneath national parks and
PEDL licences have also been issued for central and southern areas of the North
York Moors from just south of Danby down to Pickering.
Great Ayton, Guisborough, Middlesbrough and Hartlepool
sit under another licence area.
If any of these areas do prove to be commercially
viable, a decision on whether to allow planning permission for industrial shale
gas extraction would no longer be made locally under the Conservative
manifesto. But the communities could benefit from a greater share of the shale
wealth fund…
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