Public can have say on latest oil drilling update

Jamie Waller
Local Democracy Reporting Service
Eleanor Maslin
BBC News
BBC Several campaigners from SOS Biscathorpe pose with colourful placards outside the Royal Court of Justice. Words on some of the placards read "it's oil that lubricates our resistance," "keep it in the ground", "no new oil".BBC
Campaigners from SOS Biscathorpe have been fighting against the oil drilling plans for years

A campaign group is urging residents to have their say on the latest stage of a long-running legal battle over oil drilling in the Lincolnshire Wolds.

The decision to approve an oilfield in Biscathorpe was quashed in July last year following a Supreme Court judgement after a claim had been brought in by SOS Biscathorpe.

Last year, justices at the Supreme Court said emissions created by burning fossil fuels should be considered when granting planning permission for new drilling sites.

The public have until 28 July to submit their opinions on further information submitted by the developer, Egdon Resources, on the potential climate impact of burning extracted oil.

Mark Abbott, chief executive officer at Edgon Resources, said the company had submitted an assessment of the greenhouse gas emissions at the request of the Planning Inspectorate.

The documents can be viewed on the planning applications portal on Lincolnshire County Council's website.

The application for an oil well at Biscathorpe was initially refused by Lincolnshire County Council in 2021, but the company successfully appealed it before it was taken to the High Court.

An aerial view of flat green fields with a rectangular watered surface in the middle. No people or vehicles can be seen.
The proposed oil drilling site is located at a former sand quarry in the Lincolnshire Wolds, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty

SOS Biscathorpe, which has been fighting the plans for years, said the development "delivers almost nothing for national energy security, while threatening the integrity of one of Lincolnshire's most treasured natural areas".

Mr Abbott said: "Although we are in transition away from fossil fuels, we are still highly reliant on oil and gas for transportation, heating our homes and running our businesses."

According to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, Egdon Resources previously said it could potentially extract 6.5 million barrels of oil over 15 years at the site.

People wanting to submit their opinions can do so by writing to the Planning Inspectorate using the Planning Inspectorate Portal on its website, a document on the appeal application stated.

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