Burniston gas rig decision delayed after Government intervention

More than 1,600 local objections have been made against the proposal

Burniston Fracking Demonstration
Author: Anttoni James Numminen, LDRSPublished 29th Jan 2026

A decision on controversial plans for a gas drilling rig in North Yorkshire has been postponed following intervention by the Government.

The Government has said it will examine Europa Oil & Gas’ application for a 38m gas rig in Burniston, near Scarborough, days before councillors were set to make a decision on the plan which has been recommended for approval.

North Yorkshire Council said it was not in a position to set a new date for the committee until it receives confirmation from the Planning Inspectorate “on whether the application is to be called in”.

More than 1,600 local objections have been made against the proposal, citing environmental concerns, while the oil and gas company behind the plan, which proposes using a controversial “proppant squeeze” method to extract the gas, has previously said there is “no justification for delaying a decision on the application”.

The Secretary of State will, in general, only consider the use of his call-in powers if planning issues of more than local importance are involved, according to the Government.

Members of the public who were scheduled to speak at Friday’s planning meeting were informed of the postponment following a request to the council to “not issue a decision pending the Planning Inspectorate’s consideration of a request made by interested parties to the Secretary of State to call in the application.”

North Yorkshire Council’s assistant chief executive, Barry Khan, said: “Yesterday (Wednesday, January 28) we received correspondence from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government asking that no decision is issued in this case while the Secretary of State considers these requests.

“The decision to postpone the meeting has been made as a result of this correspondence, as well as discussions with councillors who sit on the strategic planning committee. We will not be in a position to set a new date for the committee until we receive confirmation from the Planning Inspectorate on whether the application is to be called in.”

Tony Bosworth, climate campaigner at Friends of the Earth, said: “North Yorkshire Council is right to delay a decision on this deeply controversial fracking scheme while the government is still reviewing its position.

“Fracking blights our countryside, won’t cut UK energy bills and is deeply unpopular with local communities.

“Ministers have promised to ban fracking. That ban must include proppant squeeze, a low-level form of fracking, or communities across large parts of England risk seeing it creep in through the back door.”

​Alison Hume, the MP for Scarborough and Whitby, recently said: “I believe, because of events on a nationwide governmental level, it makes sense to push this meeting back.”

​The national developments Ms Hume referred to include the launch of the government’s consultation on proposed changes to the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF), which runs until March 10.

​However, Europa’s CEO, William Holland, previously said that “taking into account the direction of travel of the new draft NPPF there is no justification for delaying a decision on the application.”

​He said: “The current evidence base, both nationally and internationally, proves the proposed operation at Burniston is safe and environmentally sound. The UK onshore oil and gas industry is one of the most heavily regulated in the world.”

Europa Oil & Gas has been contacted for a comment.

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