The Prague Post - Court challenge begins against UK oil and gas field approvals

EUR -
AED 4.177023
AFN 80.542045
ALL 98.683768
AMD 442.285799
ANG 2.049618
AOA 1041.702569
ARS 1324.878702
AUD 1.779563
AWG 2.049857
AZN 1.928482
BAM 1.95703
BBD 2.295583
BDT 138.136833
BGN 1.955408
BHD 0.428625
BIF 3381.585135
BMD 1.13723
BND 1.48546
BOB 7.856076
BRL 6.386457
BSD 1.136935
BTN 96.083933
BWP 15.564057
BYN 3.720704
BYR 22289.70531
BZD 2.283776
CAD 1.57288
CDF 3272.947154
CHF 0.938555
CLF 0.028107
CLP 1078.605939
CNY 8.26709
CNH 8.266285
COP 4772.953734
CRC 574.271086
CUC 1.13723
CUP 30.136591
CVE 110.330473
CZK 24.917614
DJF 202.460827
DKK 7.465163
DOP 66.913238
DZD 150.710227
EGP 57.75911
ERN 17.058448
ETB 152.577193
FJD 2.571304
FKP 0.848829
GBP 0.851569
GEL 3.12165
GGP 0.848829
GHS 16.201469
GIP 0.848829
GMD 81.302394
GNF 9846.843381
GTQ 8.755658
GYD 238.58417
HKD 8.820844
HNL 29.504584
HRK 7.532667
HTG 148.535982
HUF 404.082221
IDR 18899.338782
ILS 4.120748
IMP 0.848829
INR 96.139712
IQD 1489.362406
IRR 47877.37689
ISK 145.894685
JEP 0.848829
JMD 179.983137
JOD 0.806634
JPY 162.661965
KES 147.191951
KGS 99.450559
KHR 4550.940757
KMF 491.567639
KPW 1023.463987
KRW 1617.538411
KWD 0.348481
KYD 0.947512
KZT 583.452149
LAK 24580.883839
LBP 101869.326599
LKR 340.339923
LRD 227.386934
LSL 21.17018
LTL 3.357945
LVL 0.687899
LYD 6.205901
MAD 10.538295
MDL 19.515611
MGA 5048.26212
MKD 61.554749
MMK 2387.491007
MNT 4063.63985
MOP 9.08397
MRU 44.991843
MUR 51.357461
MVR 17.509108
MWK 1971.47394
MXN 22.20851
MYR 4.907169
MZN 72.794414
NAD 21.170552
NGN 1822.433714
NIO 41.837035
NOK 11.805049
NPR 153.739428
NZD 1.921663
OMR 0.437835
PAB 1.136935
PEN 4.168594
PGK 4.642081
PHP 63.534744
PKR 319.450224
PLN 4.27479
PYG 9105.964224
QAR 4.143951
RON 4.978227
RSD 117.275782
RUB 92.402801
RWF 1633.255388
SAR 4.265468
SBD 9.508717
SCR 16.165728
SDG 682.908112
SEK 10.964954
SGD 1.485483
SHP 0.893684
SLE 25.872112
SLL 23847.123141
SOS 649.71984
SRD 41.907169
STD 23538.362101
SVC 9.947903
SYP 14785.591368
SZL 21.151668
THB 38.005794
TJS 11.983243
TMT 3.991677
TND 3.376756
TOP 2.663509
TRY 43.7553
TTD 7.700976
TWD 36.428316
TZS 3064.834456
UAH 47.163906
UGX 4164.764459
USD 1.13723
UYU 47.838389
UZS 14704.631239
VES 98.425096
VND 29573.662581
VUV 136.933175
WST 3.148306
XAF 656.381145
XAG 0.035253
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.073421
XDR 0.815087
XOF 656.369594
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.677643
ZAR 21.111763
ZMK 10236.430299
ZMW 31.635442
ZWL 366.187552
  • RIO

    -1.9000

    58.98

    -3.22%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    22.11

    -0.59%

  • NGG

    -0.3600

    72.68

    -0.5%

  • BTI

    0.5350

    43.395

    +1.23%

  • SCS

    -0.1950

    9.815

    -1.99%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4500

    63

    -0.71%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3700

    9.88

    -3.74%

  • VOD

    0.0550

    9.635

    +0.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.1000

    22.25

    -0.45%

  • BP

    -0.3100

    27.76

    -1.12%

  • BCE

    -0.0420

    21.878

    -0.19%

  • BCC

    -3.0500

    91.45

    -3.34%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    12.82

    -0.86%

  • RELX

    0.0700

    53.86

    +0.13%

  • AZN

    -0.1500

    71.56

    -0.21%

  • GSK

    0.6900

    39.66

    +1.74%

Court challenge begins against UK oil and gas field approvals
Court challenge begins against UK oil and gas field approvals / Photo: Daniel LEAL - AFP

Court challenge begins against UK oil and gas field approvals

Two environmental groups kicked off a legal challenge in Scotland on Tuesday to block the Rosebank and Jackdaw oil and gas fields in the North Sea, with activists optimistic of success.

Text size:

"We're more confident than ever we can win," said environmental lawyer Tessa Khan before the case opened at the Court of Session in Edinburgh.

Her optimism was shared by hundreds of people who demonstrated outside the court, in celebratory mood given recent rulings that have put the future of the fields in doubt.

Campaign groups Uplift and Greenpeace argue that the UK government granted permissions unlawfully by failing to take into account all emissions from burning oil and gas.

A win for the campaigners would mean operators would have to resubmit environmental assessments for approval before drilling can start.

Former Scottish National Party lawmaker Tommy Sheppard called the case "the granddaddy because it is so big".

"The case will be applied to the decision-making process in general," he told AFP.

"There were 100 licences granted by the last Conservative government in its final dying months. All of them will now be under question."

Regulatory approval for drilling at the Rosebank oil field, 145 kilometres (90 miles) off the Shetland Islands in Scotland's far north, was granted last year.

It 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.

The Jackdaw gas condensate field, approved in 2022, is being developed 155 miles east of the Scottish city of Aberdeen and was expected to start production next year.

Rosebank is owned by Norwegian energy giant Equinor and the UK's Ithaca Energy. Jackdaw is owned by Shell. Both say the developments are "vital" for UK energy security.

- Narrow window -

Khan, who is executive director of Uplift, said it had been a "David versus Goliath" battle at the start of the case, pitting campaigners on one side against the UK government and energy firms on the other.

But in July, the UK Supreme Court ruled that the previous Conservative government should have considered the carbon emissions of burning extracted oil and gas, not just of extracting it.

Then the incoming Labour government announced it would not contest the case, leaving the oil companies alone to fight legal challenges.

"We are on the precipice of a massive victory for the climate," said Uplift campaigner Lauren MacDonald.

Khan said there was a broader message to the oil industry: that they now have to take into account all greenhouse gas emissions, even those that occur indirectly.

"We now have a government that is really trying to re-establish the UK's climate credentials," she said. "The window for approval has really, really narrowed."

- Renewables -

Sheppard said the increased economic costs would force energy companies to look towards developing the renewables sector, provided the government gives the necessary investment and incentives.

At the same time, governments in oil-generating countries like Scotland must tread a fine line in balancing the longer term threats of rising temperatures with the shorter term risks of job losses in the sector.

Energy historian Ewan Gibbs, from the University of Glasgow, pointed to potential parallels with the breakdown of social cohesion caused by the closure of the UK's coal mines in the 1980s without a plan for those made redundant.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer, in Baku, Azerbaijan for the UN climate change summit, intends to decarbonise Britain's power grid by 2030 as part of government plans to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

Sheppard said it was important that those affected by net-zero transition plans be reskilled and retrained to enable them to benefit from new jobs being created by clean energy technologies.

T.Musil--TPP