BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Frack Free Balcombe Residents Association v Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities & Ors [2023] EWHC 2548 (Admin) (13 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/2548.html Cite as: [2024 Env LR 16, [2023] EWHC 2548 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
FRACK FREE BALCOMBE RESIDENTS ASSOCIATION |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR LEVELLING UP, HOUSING AND COMMUNITIES |
First Defendant |
|
and |
||
ANGUS ENERGY WEALD BASIN NO.3 LIMITED |
Second Defendant |
|
and |
||
WEST SUSSEX COUNTY COUNCIL |
Third Defendant |
____________________
Mr Tom Cosgrove KC and Mr Ben Du Feu (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the First Defendants
The Second Defendants did not attend and were not represented
Ms Jenny Wigley KC (instructed by West Sussex County Council) for the Third Defendants
Hearing dates: 19 July 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
Ground 1: Unlawful to rely on the benefits without the harms of hydrocarbon extraction
Ground 2: Flawed interpretation of M7 of the West Sussex Joint Minerals Local Plan
Ground 3: Unlawful failure to consider alternatives to proposal outside the AONB
Ground 4: Failure to comply with the EIA Regulations
Ground 5: Failure to consider the impacts on climate change
Ground 6: Unlawful failure to assess impact on water resources
The Decision Letter
"46. In the ongoing transition to a net zero-carbon energy economy, over 98% of the decreasing, but for some years substantial, domestic demand for oil and gas will be met by North Sea reserves. Aside from a recent reversal due to reduced home demand, the UK has long been a net importer of oil. It is currently very uncertain to what extent demand will return to its level before the Covid pandemic lockdowns of 2020-22. This uncertainty is compounded by the continuing hostilities between Ukraine and Russia, disrupting international oil and gas supplies.
47. In the circumstances, it would plainly be inappropriate to rely upon imported oil both from the point of view of security of supply and with regard to sustainability in its broader sense.
48. There is nothing in current national or local policy to restrict the appraisal or production of hydrocarbons or to say that a proposal to explore and test a known hydrocarbon reserve should be refused on grounds that its yield might be of small scale. It is precisely the point of proposals like that in this appeal, to obtain such information and it would not be appropriate to anticipate the result of the EWT with conjecture that the ultimate yield of the well might be minimal.
49. The proportion of domestic supply won from onshore sources, currently mostly from a single facility in Dorset, is clearly of relatively small scale but that is not to say that it is insignificant or unimportant. The present proposal should not be refused merely because it might lead only to a small additional contribution, or even no contribution at all to essential domestic oil supplies.
50. There remains a significant national need for onshore hydrocarbon exploration and assessment for considerable time to come. This weighs greatly in favour of this appeal, given also the great policy weight still attributed nationally to the benefits of mineral extraction."
"57. With reference to the provisions of JMLP Policies M7a and M13 and NPPF paragraphs 176, 177, 209 and 211, I have found that there are no evident comparable accessible or cost-effective alternatives to the appeal proposals and that the site could be restored to a high standard under the agreed planning conditions. There is no evidence that harm would occur due to the storage of hazardous substances on the site. I give modest weight to such benefit as would result to the local economy.
58. I have found that all adverse impacts of the development could be acceptably mitigated in planning terms but with the notable exception that there would be moderate adverse impact on the landscape of the AONB, contrary to the MSDP and NPPF.
59. Even such moderate harm to the AONB carries great weight in terms of the NPPF. Against that is to be balanced the evident national need I have identified for continued hydrocarbon exploration and assessment in the interests of energy supply security pending ultimate transition net carbon-zero energy provision.
60. In my overall judgement, the national need is the overriding consideration and furthermore amounts to the requisite exceptional justification for permitting this major development within the High Weald AONB."
Ground One
"64. On a fair reading of the OR, the Planning Officer did place substantial weight on the contingent benefits that, in his assessment, would accrue from the development in Phase 1, and he invited the Committee to do the same. His overall approach was to invite the Committee to attribute substantial or significant weight to the prospective benefits of the wider development whilst directing them that they must leave out of account entirely any possible harms. Whilst it was open to the decision maker to treat the prospective benefits of the wider development as material factors, and it is understandable why they did, it was irrational to do so without taking account of any adverse impact that the envisaged development might have, to the extent that it was possible to do so, (which it was, albeit at a high level). The two go hand in hand; you cannot have one without the other. Ground 1 is therefore made out."
"81. One should not read more into paragraphs 28, 36 and 37 than is actually there. The conclusion in paragraph 28, that the need for shale gas exploration should have "great weight", was one the Secretary of State was entitled to reach in the light of government policy. And it was consistent with his conclusions in paragraphs 36 and 37 that the written ministerial statement and the NPPF encourage shale gas exploration as an activity consistent with the Government's objectives "to achieve lower carbon emissions and help meet its climate change target", and "to support the transition to a low carbon future in a changing climate"; and that the proposed development would "represent a positive contribution towards the reduction of carbon". The Secretary of State was not saying – nor could he – that this development would itself bring about a reduction in carbon emissions, or that such a benefit should weigh for it in the planning balance. Contrary to Mr Willers' submission, he did not give "significant weight", or any weight, to that supposition. He was merely recognizing, quite properly, that the development would help to achieve the objective of reducing carbon by establishing whether or not a commercially viable resource of shale gas existed on these sites. That makes sense. Exploration for shale gas is necessary before a commercial decision can be taken on the viability of production, and a planning decision on the merits of such development, if ever proposed. The Secretary of State's conclusion in paragraph 37 did not anticipate those future decisions. Rather, it acknowledged that such decisions would only be possible if the present proposals for exploration went ahead. [emphasis added]
82. The conclusion in paragraph 47 of the decision letter, that "no weight" should be given to the "national economic benefits" of possible future "commercial production" was not at odds with those earlier conclusions. It was, however, a different conclusion from the inspector's in paragraph 12.757 of her report, which was not that "no weight" should be given to such benefits, but that they should have "very limited weight". The difference here was not simply one of degree; it was a difference of principle. The Secretary of State meant to stress it. He said that he noted – not that he agreed with – the inspector's conclusion as to weight, and he deliberately distanced himself from it. He plainly had in mind here the policy in paragraph 147 of the NPPF, which is amplified in the guidance in paragraph 27-120-20140306 of the PPG – in effect, that decision-makers must be careful to distinguish between "exploration" for hydrocarbons, "appraisal", and subsequent commercial "production" if proposed. He also referred to "commercial production" of shale gas on the appeal sites and its potential benefits – carefully and correctly – in uncertain terms: "… benefits which could flow from commercial production … at some point in the future (my emphasis)."
Ground Two
"Policy M7a: Hydrocarbon23 development not involving hydraulic fracturing
Exploration and Appraisal:
(a) Proposals for exploration and appraisal of oil and gas, not involving hydraulic fracturing, including extensions to existing sites will be permitted provided that:
(i) with regard to development proposals deemed to be major, the site is located outside the South Downs National Park, High Weald AONB or Chichester Harbour AONB unless it has been demonstrated that there are exceptional circumstances and that it is in the public interest, and in accordance with Policy M13;
(ii) the site selected represents an acceptable environmental option in comparison to other deliverable alternative sites from which the target reservoir can be accessed, taking into account impacts from on-site activities including HGV movements;
(iii) any unacceptable impacts including (but not limited to) noise, dust, visual intrusion, transport and lighting, on both the natural, historic and built environment and local community, including air quality and the water environment, can be minimised, and/or mitigated to an acceptable level;
(iv) restoration and aftercare of the site to a high-quality standard would take place in accordance with Policy M24 whether or not oil or gas is found;
(v) no unacceptable impacts would arise from the on-site storage or treatment of hazardous substances and/or contaminated fluids above or below ground.
….
"Policy M7b: Hydrocarbon development involving hydraulic fracturing
Exploration and Appraisal:
(a) Proposals for exploration and appraisal for oil and gas, involving hydraulic fracturing, including extensions to existing sites will be permitted providing that:
(i) any surface development is located outside the following areas (as shown on the policies map):
i. …
ii. …
iii. High Weald AONB
iv. Any other area given specific protection from hydraulic fracturing in legislation
(ii) …
(iii) any adverse impacts including (but not limited to) noise, dust, visual intrusion, transport, and lighting, on both the natural, historic and built environment and local community, including air quality and the water environment, can be minimised, and/or mitigated, to an acceptable level;
(iv) restoration and aftercare of the site to a high-quality standard would take place in accordance with Policy M24 whether or not oil or gas is found;
Production:
(b) Proposals for oil and gas production, involving hydraulic fracturing, including extensions (see footnote 26) to existing sites, will be permitted providing that:
(i) they accord with (a)(i)-(iv) above;
(ii) no unacceptable impacts would arise from the transport, by vehicle or other means, of oil/gas, water, consumables and waste to or from the site;
Activity beneath or proximate to designated areas:
(c) Proposals for exploration, appraisal and production of oil and gas, involving hydraulic fracturing underneath or in close proximity to designated areas, assets and habitats, will be permitted provided that there will be no unacceptable harm to these areas and the special qualities of the South Downs National Park and/or the setting and intrinsic character and value of the Chichester Harbour and High Weald AONBs. Hydraulic fracturing will not be permitted above 1,200 metres underneath National Parks, Areas of Natural Beauty, World Heritage Sites, and areas covered by Groundwater Source Protection Zone 1.
…"
"The strategy for oil and gas is to make provision, subject to there being no unacceptable impact in West Sussex, and the use of hydraulic fracturing, within the definition used in in the Infrastructure Act 2015 (and related amendments), does not take place within, or have an unacceptable impact on, the South Downs National Park, Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, or other protected areas including protected groundwater zones. Major oil and gas development not involving high volume hydraulic fracturing should only take place within the South Downs National Park or Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty in exceptional circumstances and when it is in the public interest.
6.7.5. This approach meets the national policy requirement to make provision for oil and gas development whilst also reflecting the Government commitment to 'ensure that hydraulic fracturing cannot be conducted from wells that are drilled from the surface of National Parks and other protected areas'. Therefore, Policy M7a is the default policy for considering all development proposals associated with the extraction of both conventional and unconventional hydrocarbon resources, with the exception of those involved hydrocarbon fracturing, defined by the Infrastructure Act (2015) (and related amendments), which should be addressed by Policy M7b."
Ground Three
"Policy M13: Protected Landscape
…
(c) Proposals for major mineral development within protected landscapes will not be permitted unless there are exceptional circumstances and where it is in the public interest as informed by an assessment of:
(i) the need for the development, including in terms of any national considerations, and the impact of permitting it, or refusing it, upon the local economy;
(ii) the cost of, and scope for, developing elsewhere outside the designated area, or meeting the need for the mineral in some other way; and
(iii) any potential detrimental impact on the environment, landscape, and recreational opportunities, and the extent to which identified impacts can be satisfactorily mitigated."
"8.3.7. Within designated landscapes the requirements of paragraph 116 of the NPPF will need to be addressed. This will include provision of information about the national need for the mineral, as well as the benefits of permitting or refusing the application on the local economy. The expectation is that the search for alternatives outside the designated landscape should not be limited to the Plan area (or Licence Area for hydrocarbons) but should extend elsewhere within those areas subject to national landscape designations. [emphasis added]
8.3.8. There is also a need for applicants to demonstrate whether the financial cost of developing outside the designated area is such that the development cannot take place elsewhere. The assessment should also consider the detrimental effect on the environment, landscape, and recreational opportunities. Consideration of these impacts can be undertaken under each topic area but they must then be evaluated as part of the overall paragraph 116 assessment."
Ground Four
"71. Regulation 3 of the EIA Regulations provides that:
"The relevant planning authority… must not grant planning permission or subsequent consent for EIA development unless an EIA has been carried out in respect of that development."
72. "EIA Development" is defined in regulation 2 as:
" development which is…
(b) Schedule 2 development likely to have significant effects on the environment by virtue of factors such as its nature, size or location."
The bridge was correctly identified in the OR as a Schedule 2 development.
73. These provisions implement article 1(1) of the Environmental Impact Assessment Directive 2011/92/EU ("the EIA Directive"). The Directive requires the effects of the "project" to be assessed; the reference in the EIA regulations to the assessment of the effects of the "proposed development" is intended to give effect to this: R (Larkfleet) v South Kesteven District Council [2015] EWCA Civ 887, [2016] Env LR 4 ("Larkfleet") . As a general principle, if an EIA is required it should be carried out as early as possible.
74. "Project" is defined in art 1 of the Directive as "the execution of construction works or of other installations or schemes" and "other interventions in the natural surroundings and landscapes". The term has to be understood "broadly, and realistically." The decision-making authority should consider "the degree of connection… between the development and its putative effects" and whether a particular consequence is "truly an effect": see R(Finch) v Surrey County Council [2022] EWCA Civ 187, [2022] PTSR 958 especially at [15](4), [33], [42] and [60] .
75. "Likely" in this context means "possible", in the sense of "something more than a bare possibility, though any serious possibility would suffice": R (Bateman) v South Cambridgeshire DC [2011] EWCA Civ 157, ("Bateman") at [15]-[21]; Bowen-West v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2012] EWCA Civ 321, [2012] Env LR 22 at [28] .
76. Regulation 5 contains general provisions relating to screening: the Judge quoted relevant aspects in his judgment at para 94. The requirement in Article 5(2) to provide "information on the site, design and size of the project" is a flexible one, which enables the planning authority to provide more or less information on those factors depending on the nature and characteristics of the project to be assessed. In R v Rochdale Metropolitan Borough Council ex parte Milne [2001] Env LR 22, ("Rochdale") Sullivan J (as he then was) said at [H7] and [H8]:
"If a particular kind of project was, by its very nature, not fixed at the outset, but was expected to evolve over a number of years … there was no reason why a "description of the project" for the purposes of the Directive should not recognise that reality….
The Directive sought to ensure that as much knowledge as could reasonably be obtained, given the nature of the project, about its likely significant effect on the environment was available to the decision taker. It is not intended to prevent the development of some projects because, by their very nature, "full knowledge" was not available at the outset."
77. As Moore-Bick LJ pointed out in Bateman at [20], a screening opinion is designed to identify those cases in which the development (i.e. the project) is likely to have significant effects on the environment. That assessment is necessarily based on less than complete information. It is not intended to involve a detailed assessment of factors relevant to the grant of planning permission, nor a full assessment of any identifiable environmental effects.
78. The identity of the "project" for these purposes is not necessarily circumscribed by the ambit of the specific application for planning permission which is under consideration. The objectives of the Directive and the Regulations cannot be circumvented (deliberately or otherwise) by dividing what is in reality a single project into separate parts and treating each of them as a "project" – a process referred to in shorthand as "salami-slicing": see e.g. the observations of the CJEU in Ecologistas en Accion-CODA v Ayuntamento de Madrid [2008] ECR 1-6097 at [48] (adopting the approach taken in para [51] of the Advocate-General's opinion).
79. In Larkfleet , it was held that a proposed urban extension development and a link road were not a single project because despite the connections between them, there was a "strong planning imperative" for the construction of the link road as part of a town by-pass, which had nothing to do with the proposed development of the residential site. By contrast, in Burridge v Breckland District Council [2013] EWCA Civ 228, ("Burridge") the Court of Appeal held that a planning application for a biomass renewable energy plant and a planning application for a combined heat and power plant linked to it by an underground gas pipe were a "single project," on the basis that they were "functionally interdependent and [could] only be regarded as an "integral part" of the same development."
80. It follows that the identification of the "project" is based on a fact-specific inquiry. That means other cases, decided on different facts, are only relevant to the limited extent that they indicate the type of factors which might assist in determining whether or not the proposed development is an integral part of a wider project.
81. Lang J, in her judgment in R(Wingfield) v Canterbury City Council and another [2019] EWHC 1975 (Admin), [2020] JPL 154, ("Wingfield") stated at [63] that the question as to what constitutes the "project" is a matter of judgment for the competent planning authority, subject to challenge on grounds of Wednesbury rationality or other public law error. At [64] she set out a non-exhaustive list of potentially relevant criteria, which serves as a useful aide-memoire. These include whether the sites are owned or promoted by the same person, functional interdependence, and stand-alone projects. In relation to the last of these factors she said:
"where a development is justified on its own merits and would be pursued independently of another development, this may indicate that it constitutes a single individual project that is not an integral part of a more substantial scheme".
The reverse may also be true, and that reflects the position in this case."
"…The court should not impose too high a burden on planning authorities in relation to "what is no more than a procedure intended to identify the relatively small number of cases in which the development is likely to have significant effects on the environment."
67.The issues of whether there is sufficient information before the planning authority for them to issue a screening opinion and whether a development is likely to have significant environmental effects, are both matters of judgment for the planning authority. Such decisions may only be challenged in the courts on grounds of irrationality or other public law error…"
"In this case, taking into account the temporary period over which the operations would take place, the small scale of physical development, and the controls in place through the Environmental Permitting regulations, and through HSE, and taking into account the criterial in Schedule 3 of the EIA Regulations, it is considered that the proposal does not have the potential for significant environmental impact within the meaning of the EIA Regulations."
Ground Five
Ground Six
"Policy M16: Water Resources
Proposals for mineral development will be permitted provided that they would:
(a) not cause unacceptable risk to the quality and quantity of water resources;
(b) not cause changes to groundwater and surface water levels which would result in unacceptable impacts on:
(i) adjoining land;
(ii) the quality of groundwater resources or potential groundwater resources; and
(iii) the potential yield of groundwater resources, river flows or natural habitats such as wetlands or heaths; and
(c) protect and where possible enhance, the quality of rivers and other watercourses and water bodies (including within built-up areas)."
"The Hydrogeological Risk Assessment concluded that there is a very low likelihood of groundwater impact from the development, and that this will be monitored and managed, with the full engagement of the EA during all phases. Effects upon Ardingly Reservoir were scoped out of the hydrogeological risk assessment, as the Site is not hydraulically linked to it, and is separated from it by significantly higher ground which forms the watershed. The watercourses surrounding the Site are monitored in compliance with EA permits."
"With regard to the risk of human health implications which may arise from water pollution, the Hydrogeological Risk Assessment submitted with the application concluded that there is a very low likelihood of groundwater impact from the development, and that this will be monitored and managed, with the full engagement of the EA, during all phases. As stated above, no adverse effects upon Ardingly Reservoir are anticipated; it is not hydraulically linked to the Site. Therefore, no health effects are expected relating to the pollution of surface water or groundwater resources."
"We argue that no such reliance can be put on the HRA as it is based on incorrect and incomplete information. There is a hydrological link between the site and the Ardingly Reservoir. The poor state of the cementing of the well bore should have been disclosed as this risks hydrocarbons leaking into the aquifer. The Appellant has not been able to satisfy the requirement that per M13 c iii) "any potential detrimental impact on the environment, landscape and recreational opportunities and the extent to which identified impacts can be satisfactorily mitigated."
"Dear Mr Hawkins
We apologise if we have mislead you though we did state at the meeting that there is not a direct hydraulic connection between Ardingly reservoir and the River Ouse.
It is an indirect connection because it can only take place if South East Water pumps from the river to the reservoir. We did state that South East Water does have an abstraction point on the River Ouse which they can use to refill Ardingly reservoir when levels are low. Due to the very low reservoir levels in early 2012 South East Water would have used the abstraction point to provide additional refill to the reservoir when there was enough water in the river to meet their licence conditions.
However as you point out the rapid change in weather conditions meant that it would have only been for a relatively brief time period. Typically this abstraction point is not used as the reservoir will normally refill naturally and operation of pumps incurs significant cost. Normal operation for the Ouse catchment is that the abstraction at Barcombe provide the main source for public water supply.
I trust this clarifies the situation."
"34. The submitted hydrogeological risk assessment confirms that the appeal site is not hydrologically linked to the Ardingly Reservoir, noting an intervening watershed. Nor is the site within or close to any groundwater source protection zones. The only evident significant risk of water pollution concerns streams, as close as 15m from the site boundary, from run-ff or structural failure of the wellbore itself.
35. The site is within Flood Zone 1 of low flood risk and the submitted flood risk assessment identifies no significant surface water flow routes across it. Surface soils would be protected by the over-site pad membrane included within the Phase 2 civil engineering works. The wellbore is subject, under separate legislation, to approval and monitoring by the Health and Safety Executive and the Environment Agency, who have approved the proposals."