Antri-fracking protesters in Preston, Britain
© Andrew Yates / ReutersAntri-fracking protesters in Preston, Britain
Fracking will go ahead in the UK despite objections after ministers overruled a local government ban on the controversial drilling method.

The landmark ruling for Britain's budding shale gas industry steamrolled over a decision by Lancashire County Council to block fracking at the Preston New Road site in Little Plumpton, Lancashire.

Local activists reacted angrily to the decision, which found in favor of fracking company Cuadrilla, describing it as "a total denial of democracy."

Fracking is a controversial energy extraction method in which liquid is pumped beneath the Earth's surface at high speed to break apart rock and free trapped natural gas.

The government wants Britain to be home to a major shale gas industry, but anti-fracking campaigners warn the technique causes water pollution, earthquakes and contributes to greenhouse gas emissions.

Communities Secretary Sajid Javid gave the greenlight to fracking at the Lancashire site, claiming the decision will help build "an economy that works for everyone."

"Shale gas has the potential to power economic growth, support 64,000 jobs, and provide a new domestic energy source, making us less reliant on imports," said Javid.


Comment: Seems as though every time the powers that be want to do something beyond the will of the people they throw out the "jobs" excuse, as if that will placate the population. Nevermind that fracking has been the most probable cause of large numbers of quakes, and the most likely cause of pollution of water wells - some of which have so much gas in them that tap water can be lit on fire.


Cuadrilla Chief Executive Frances Egan welcomed the decision.

"We have been through an exhaustive environmental impact assessment on this," she said.

"We have assessed everything; noise, traffic, water, emissions, etc. The Environment Agency are entirely comfortable with it."

Local campaign group Residents Action on Fylde Fracking said they would continue to fight the decision "peacefully and legally."

"This is a total denial of democracy. Our parish council, our borough council, our county council all threw out this application," the group's co-founder, Pam Foster, said.

"We have pursued every democratic channel we can do, there's nothing left for us. We're pretty disgusted and very upset."

Greenpeace condemned the decision, which it claims will throw Britain's climate change commitments into question.

"This fudged decision shows the government is struggling to force fracking on a reluctant nation. Fracking will put our countryside and air quality at risk," said Greenpeace campaigner Hannah Martin.

"Digging up more fossil fuels that we can't burn if we are to honor the international agreement we signed in Paris and is coming into force soon makes little economic or environmental sense."