Fracking to be banned on Nottinghamshire County Council land following cross party support

By Anna Whittaker - Local Democracy Reporter

21st Jan 2023 | Local News

Nottinghamshire County Council has banned fracking on its land. Image: LDRS.
Nottinghamshire County Council has banned fracking on its land. Image: LDRS.

Nottinghamshire County Council has banned fracking on its land.

Fracking involves the hydraulic fracturing of rocks by pumping water and chemicals at high pressure to release gas to be used for energy.

A motion put forward by the Independent Alliance at the county council, which was amended by the Conservatives, was passed unanimously by councillors at the full council meeting on January 19.

The motion stated: "The council believes that fracking has the potential to detrimentally impact the environment.

"This council does not support fracking in Nottinghamshire or outside county boundaries which could adversely affect residents in our county.

"This council, therefore, commits not to allow any fracking activities, including survey work, on Council owned or controlled land and property, unless and until national policy changes."

In 2019 the Conservative party made a manifesto commitment to ban fracking, but in September 2022 then-Prime Minister Liz Truss lifted the ban.

The ban was then reintroduced in October 2022 under Rishi Sunak's leadership.

Supporters say it can create energy at low cost and create jobs, but many environmental campaigners have opposed it, saying it can harm wildlife and cause pollution.

Cllr Mike Adams (Con), Environment Ambassador for the county council, said during the meeting: "I am not willing to be a passenger on the energy bus that we are travelling on.

"Although fracking is here and continually seems to show its face in the energy discussion, it is definitely not the future of energy.

"The way we've got to keep ensuring that is the case is listening to businesses and residents.

"If we can take that step and push businesses along, the need for these panic button situations to get fracking on board when bills go up, is not needed as much.

Cllr John Willmott (Ind), who represents Hucknall North, said the prospect of fracking should be "kicked into the long grass".

He said: "The best way of doing that is to have a policy against fracking.

"Scientists have proved it's a health hazard. Green modern energy is the answer."

Cllr Penny Gowland (Lab) said: "Fracking is not the answer. it will put Co2 into the air. We must oppose it."

Councillor Steve Carr (Lib Dem) and member of the Independent Alliance seconded the motion and said after the meeting that it was a "historic day for Nottinghamshire County Council".

He said: "It was the day we finally said no to fracking. We have sent a clear message to the Conservative Government that value we our environment.

"I was pleased to play a central role in forcing the Council to protect our environment for future generations across Nottinghamshire."

Speaking after the meeting Cllr Jason Zadrozny, leader of Ashfield District Council, said: "We are delighted that as a result of our campaigning, Nottinghamshire County Council has now changed its policy on fracking.

"Let me be clear – fracking will be an environmental disaster and will not cut energy bills by one penny. Independent Councillors are really making a difference as the opposition in County Hall. This is yet another example."

     

New hucknall Jobs Section Launched!!
Vacancies updated hourly!!
Click here: hucknall jobs

Share:

Related Articles

Michael Crawshaw with his latest work 'The Gerasimov Doctrine' (Image by Nub News)
Local News

'I thought the premise was a bit silly': Michael Crawshaw on writing, Russia and outsiders in his new book, The Gerasimov Doctrine

Hardwicke Circus will kick off their pub tour in Sheffield on September 26. (Credit: Hardwicke Circus and Pixabay)
Local News

Hardwicke Circus to bring critically-acclaimed rock 'n' roll sound to pubs all over the UK

Sign-Up for our FREE Newsletter

We want to provide hucknall with more and more clickbait-free local news.
To do that, we need a loyal newsletter following.
Help us survive and sign up to our FREE weekly newsletter.

Already subscribed? Thank you. Just press X or click here.
We won't pass your details on to anyone else.
By clicking the Subscribe button you agree to our Privacy Policy.