The Prague Post - Scottish court rules against two new North Sea oil and gas fields

EUR -
AED 4.268018
AFN 77.161574
ALL 96.738871
AMD 444.721839
ANG 2.080238
AOA 1065.696187
ARS 1608.426875
AUD 1.783729
AWG 2.093333
AZN 1.978548
BAM 1.954573
BBD 2.339732
BDT 141.441233
BGN 1.956021
BHD 0.438174
BIF 3423.651344
BMD 1.162156
BND 1.505848
BOB 8.026962
BRL 6.324916
BSD 1.161671
BTN 102.496674
BWP 16.538549
BYN 3.9568
BYR 22778.25055
BZD 2.336434
CAD 1.631603
CDF 2725.255262
CHF 0.92868
CLF 0.028456
CLP 1116.343676
CNY 8.296626
CNH 8.287889
COP 4549.502307
CRC 585.132775
CUC 1.162156
CUP 30.797124
CVE 110.195368
CZK 24.284637
DJF 206.87017
DKK 7.468465
DOP 73.214051
DZD 151.560171
EGP 55.320985
ERN 17.432335
ETB 171.564727
FJD 2.641927
FKP 0.872641
GBP 0.86949
GEL 3.161243
GGP 0.872641
GHS 13.185725
GIP 0.872641
GMD 84.83767
GNF 10081.672822
GTQ 8.897416
GYD 243.00749
HKD 9.035182
HNL 30.510852
HRK 7.534838
HTG 152.004603
HUF 390.493014
IDR 19308.053808
ILS 3.819634
IMP 0.872641
INR 102.264758
IQD 1521.844902
IRR 48868.64531
ISK 141.620502
JEP 0.872641
JMD 186.113197
JOD 0.823979
JPY 175.976515
KES 150.092196
KGS 101.630859
KHR 4673.047128
KMF 493.916161
KPW 1045.982096
KRW 1654.680582
KWD 0.356248
KYD 0.968088
KZT 626.206997
LAK 25217.173901
LBP 104029.911651
LKR 351.94912
LRD 212.586582
LSL 20.112677
LTL 3.431544
LVL 0.702977
LYD 6.313038
MAD 10.665606
MDL 19.649584
MGA 5228.718498
MKD 61.621322
MMK 2440.08532
MNT 4179.109256
MOP 9.299823
MRU 46.47983
MUR 52.761342
MVR 17.784555
MWK 2014.036007
MXN 21.475404
MYR 4.918223
MZN 74.27387
NAD 20.112677
NGN 1698.501945
NIO 42.753168
NOK 11.739399
NPR 163.994373
NZD 2.031101
OMR 0.446853
PAB 1.161671
PEN 3.979303
PGK 4.881936
PHP 67.630474
PKR 328.864607
PLN 4.253269
PYG 8207.848819
QAR 4.236541
RON 5.089043
RSD 117.195209
RUB 91.171087
RWF 1686.234478
SAR 4.358512
SBD 9.57305
SCR 16.006494
SDG 699.036421
SEK 11.026648
SGD 1.507008
SHP 0.871918
SLE 27.020248
SLL 24369.822153
SOS 662.781192
SRD 45.550732
STD 24054.275372
STN 24.484634
SVC 10.164621
SYP 15110.473987
SZL 20.102384
THB 37.846782
TJS 10.722471
TMT 4.079166
TND 3.421353
TOP 2.721886
TRY 48.625626
TTD 7.883053
TWD 35.590206
TZS 2850.398187
UAH 48.51925
UGX 4010.483053
USD 1.162156
UYU 46.580766
UZS 14155.116361
VES 228.94315
VND 30611.179566
VUV 142.421929
WST 3.259066
XAF 655.542766
XAG 0.022024
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.140784
XCG 2.093686
XDR 0.816549
XOF 655.545585
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.581114
ZAR 20.149838
ZMK 10460.79245
ZMW 26.225541
ZWL 374.213642
  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.74

    +0.08%

  • CMSD

    0.0950

    24.095

    +0.39%

  • SCS

    0.1200

    16.7

    +0.72%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    75.55

    0%

  • BTI

    -0.2250

    50.875

    -0.44%

  • GSK

    -0.4750

    43.675

    -1.09%

  • RIO

    0.8450

    69.065

    +1.22%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    14.96

    -0.13%

  • AZN

    -0.2400

    84.88

    -0.28%

  • BCC

    -0.6650

    73.455

    -0.91%

  • NGG

    0.7600

    75.01

    +1.01%

  • BP

    0.2150

    33.325

    +0.65%

  • RELX

    -0.2700

    45.16

    -0.6%

  • JRI

    0.0236

    13.9301

    +0.17%

  • BCE

    0.3400

    23.67

    +1.44%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    11.39

    +0.35%

Scottish court rules against two new North Sea oil and gas fields
Scottish court rules against two new North Sea oil and gas fields / Photo: ANDY BUCHANAN, ANDY BUCHANAN - AFP/File

Scottish court rules against two new North Sea oil and gas fields

A Scottish court on Thursday ruled against the development of two oil and gas fields in the North Sea in a "historic win" for two environmental groups.

Text size:

Scotland's Court of Session agreed with campaign groups Uplift and Greenpeace and ruled that the previous UK government's approvals for the multi-billion pound Rosebank and Jackdaw fields were unlawful as they did not consider the carbon emissions the projects would indirectly generate.

Judge Andrew Stewart, who presided over the judicial review, said he had considered all the circumstances and concluded in favour of granting "reduction", a legal term for revoking approval.

"The public interest in authorities acting lawfully and the private interest of members of the public in climate change outweigh the private interest of the developers," Stewart said.

Shell, which owns the Jackdaw gas condensate field 155 miles (250 kilometres) east of the Scottish city of Aberdeen, and Equinor, the majority owner of Rosebank oil field 145 kilometres off the Shetland Islands, will now have to resubmit their environmental impact assessments.

The decision follows a ruling by the UK Supreme Court in June that greenhouse gas emissions indirectly generated by a business -- known as Scope 3 or downstream emissions -- must be taken into account.

As a result the government, which has a binding commitment to achieve net-zero carbon emissions in the UK by 2050, will be obliged when it reassesses the project to consider the emissions generated by burning extracted oil and gas, not just those that come from the extraction process.

The oilfields were approved by the previous Conservative government, but the Labour government that came into power in July said it would not contest the Scottish court case in light of the Supreme Court ruling.

The oil companies also acknowledged during the four-day hearing in November that the Supreme Court ruling meant the fields were unlawful.

- 'New path' -

Stewart ordered that no oil or gas be extracted from the fields until the government makes its decision, but both companies can still work on the projects to "deal with the practical issues of construction and engineering prior to re-consideration".

"This is a historic win -- the age of governments approving new drilling sites by ignoring their climate impacts is over," said Philip Evans, senior campaigner at Greenpeace UK.

"The courts have agreed with what climate campaigners have said all along: Rosebank and Jackdaw are unlawful, and their full climate impacts must now be properly considered."

Shell argued during the hearing that stopping work was "a highly complex process, with significant technical and operational issues now that infrastructure is in place".

Production had been due to start this year, with Shell saying it would provide enough fuel to heat 1.4 million UK homes.

Equinor said the development would create jobs and be vital for UK energy security.

Rosebank is the UK's largest untapped oil field, estimated to contain up to 300 million barrels. Drilling had been due to begin between 2026 and 2030.

Equinor said it was investing £2.2bn ($2.7 billion) in Rosebank, while Shell's lawyer said it was investing £1.1bn in the Jackdaw gas field.

"Today's ruling rightly allows work to progress on this nationally important energy project while new consents are sought," said a Shell spokesman.

Evans said the government "should use this moment to set out a new path" by "creating a renewable energy system".

At the same time, governments in oil-generating countries like Scotland are wary of the shorter term risks of job losses in the sector.

Y.Havel--TPP