Western People (Ireland): Legal fear prompts Council to resist call for offshore site: Tuesday 16 August 2005
BY CHRISTY LOFTUS
The Cathaoirleach of Mayo County Council has been given the
go-ahead to use the “goodwill, office and resources of the council” to seek the
release of the Rossport 5.
The council, following legal advice and guidance from the
acting county manager, declined to adopt a motion calling on Shell to move the
processing of the gas to sea.
At a special meeting of the authority in Castlebar, which
went on for four and a half hours at the weekend, the Shell to Sea campaign and
one of the wives of the Rossport Five addressed the meeting.
The debate was, for the most part, conducted on a
constructive basis but broke down along party political lines when it came to
votes on the two motions tabled for discussion.
Despite warnings that a rupture of the upstream pipeline
could result in devastating loss of life in Rossport and that there could be a
Chernobyl like “meltdown,” the council declined to go along with the demand of
the Five that the processing of the gas be done at sea.
Spokesman for the Shell to Sea campaign, Mr Mark Garavan,
made it clear that the bottom line for the jailed men was their safety and that
of their families. Unless their safety could be guaranteed they would remain in
jail. They saw the only guarantee of their safety in a decision by Shell to
abandon their present proposal and refine the gas offshore.
The motion tabled by the FG cathaoirleach Cllr Henry Kenny
stopped short of calling on Shell to move the operation to sea, though it did
offer the prospect of that eventuality in the event the Independent Safety
Review found Shell’s present proposal untenable on safety grounds.
Fine Gael had their troops marshalled in support of their
Cathaoirleach, though in the end one of their number, Johnno O’Malley (Westport
electoral area) broke ranks and voted in favour of the Tim Quinn motion calling
for the refining of the gas to be done offshore.
On the other side of the house, Fianna Fail were in total
disarray with only half their twelve members in attendance. The prospect of
getting their motion through was illusory rather than real.
A new element was added to the debate from the council’s
point of view with the legal advice that any call on Shell to alter the project,
for which the council has granted permission, would be in breach of the County
Development Plan and would leave the council open to a massive legal suit by
Shell, its partners or anyone connected to the project, including contractors to
the development.
Mr Michael Browne, legal adviser, told the members while he
could not direct them to take the legal advise, he “strongly urged” them to do
so.
While the tone of the debate was largely constructive there
were some special barbs reserved for Cllr Quinn and for Dr Jerry Cowley because
of the picketing of the offices of Dep Enda Kenny.
Cllr Tim Quinn proposed his motion calling on the council to
ask Shell to process the gas at sea. It was seconded by Cllr Gerry Murray.
Before the council commenced to debate the motion, Mr Joe
Beirne, acting county manager expressed reservations about the motion and told
members it would be “unhelpful” to pass the motion.
He said the motion was “unlawful.” It would make it difficult
for the Council to attract multi-national companies into Mayo in the future. The
Shell project had gone through all the necessary regulatory processes and major
substantial investment works had already been carried out.
He pointed out that the Council's decision to grant planning
permission was upheld by An Bord Pleanála subject to 42 conditions. All works,
which had been carried out, were being monitored by the Council to ensure that
all conditions are being complied with.
Substantial infrastructural works, paid for by Shell E. & P.
Ireland Ltd., have already been carried out or are under construction by the
Council.
“Having considered the matter and taken advice, I now believe
that the motion submitted by Councillor Quinn is unlawful for the following
reasons:-
It contravenes Objective TI-G1 of the County Development Plan
which reads as follows:-
"It is an objective of the Council that it fully supports the
realisation of the Corrib Gas Field find and any other gas find in the County
either on or off-shore. It also supports the provision of an on-shore gas
terminal in North Mayo and the related pipe network through the County to
maximise the benefits for the County."
“The Council is obliged by law to implement its County
Development Plan. In the event of a litigation arising involving the Council,
other parties could sue the Council on various grounds including the following:
“* A claim that there was a legitimate expectation that the
provisions of the County Development Plan and the relevant conditions of the
planning permission would be honoured and implemented.
“* The Council is obliged by law to have regard to Government
policy.
“* Any attempt to interfere with planning permission breaches
Shell E. & P. Ireland Ltd.'s property and constitutional rights.
Again, members will be aware that the cost of this project is
approximately €900,000,000 and therefore, the cost of any litigation would have
major impact on the Council's finances and therefore, effect our ability to
continue our delivery of services.
In the light of the above, I now recommend that the motion be
withdrawn,” said Mr Beirne.
He was asked by cllr Quinn if the statement was his own and
responded that he was making the statement as acting county manager and he had
taken advice in preparing the statement.
Cllr Quinn said he had thought long and hard before tabling
his motion and he had no intention of withdrawing it. He did not hold any brief
for Shell and his sole motivation was the widespread concern at the danger of
the present project. “This is about the safety of the project. Nothing else and
all the reports and reviews won’t allay the fears or alter the fact that there
is an inherent danger in the proposal,” he said.
He added the proposal was designed to maximise the profits of
Shell who had not given proper consideration to the shallow water terminal
proposal.
A whole lot of questions remained unanswered and it was vital
for the council to consider the people of Rossport who were in jail not because
they did not want the gas to come ashore but because they wanted to have the
terminal offshore in the interests of their safety.
“That is it, the beginning and the end of the story. There
can’t be a safe pipeline unless the gas goes offshore,” he said.
He stated Shell had been arrogant in their approach to the
project and instanced the fact that he had counted 19 lorry loads of pipes going
into Erris on the very day that the oral hearing opened in Ballina. There was
also the deception about the septic tank and the welding of three km of pipeline
for which there was no permission.
There was a huge breakdown of trust and confidence between
Shell and the people and a huge unity of purpose behind the men who were in jail
to highlight a serious issue of health for themselves and also for all the
people of the area.
“They are in jail for a principle. They don’t want a time
bomb seventy metres from their homes. Multinationals don’t come into this county
for the good of their health and as we have seen they are quick to depart when
the first cold winds blow. If they are not making money for their shareholders
they are gone,” said cllr Quinn.
He wanted to know who would take responsibility if an
accident happened. The council or some agency would have to accept
responsibility for the safety of the people.
“I have done my bit. I am here convinced that it is the wrong
thing to do. Shell has the technology to take the project to sea and that is
where I stand at the moment and I am satisfied to stand by my proposal. I feel
very strongly about it. This whole thing has been very badly handled by the
powers that be and we have been very badly let down by the Dept of the Marine.
“I firmly believe that no amount of resolutions will secure the release of these
men until such time as Shell agrees to process the gas at sea,” he stated.
Mr Michael Browne, legal adviser, said he was obliged to
caution the members that the motion could expose the council to legal
proceedings and he again urged that it be withdrawn. The councillors had an
absolute duty under the Planning Acts to secure the objectives set out in the Co
Development Plan. If they went ahead with the proposal it would be a breach of
duty and would be actionable as the motion would represent a substantial
modification of the permission granted by the council. He pointed out that the
members also had an obligation under the 2001 Act to have regard for government
policy.
Shell had a ‘legitimate expectation’ that having been granted
permission they could go ahead with their project. “There is a permission in
place and I have no doubt that the council could be sued by Shell or anybody
connected to the project,” he warned. He added that planning permission was a
property right and breaking that left the council exposed.
He adverted to the fact that in a previous matter (Glencar
Exploration and gold-mining on the Reek) the council had become embroiled in
very expensive litigation with twenty-one days in the High Court and four days
in the Supreme Court.
Cllr Murray said Shell were dealing with a Third World
government when they came to Ireland but when they arrived in north Mayo they
found they were not dealing with a third world people. For the first time in a
long time the way government and big business operated was under scrutiny and
the government decisions and actions was not bearing up well.
He rejected the threats about legal action. He could not
recall how many times the council had been reminded of Glencar and their duty to
have regard to government policy. “We also have a duty to the people we
represent and we must bear in mind that this section of pipeline is not subject
to the planning permission the council granted. It is not subject to any
authority and that is the problem. Essentially the Minister has become a law
unto himself. He has set himself up as judge, jury and executioner in relation
to consent for the upstream pipeline.”
He said that looking beyond the issue of the Rossport Five
and taking in the bigger picture the issue at stake was one of multi-national
corporations dictating to government how to do business. “It would be
appropriate that the first people to take a blow against global economics should
be the people of Mayo following in the footsteps of Davitt. If that blow does
not happen in Ireland and Mayo it will happen elsewhere,” he predicted.
He said he did not agree with govt policy on the pipeline, he
did not agree the project represented sustainable development and he failed to
see what difficulty there was for the council in supporting the motion to have
the gas processed at sea.
“Surely we have the right to disagree with Govt policy?
Surely we have the right to support our own people who are fearful for their
safety if this project goes ahead as planned? And surely we have the right to
express a view about a stretch of pipeline that is not part of any permission
the council granted,” said Cllr Murray.
Cllr Frank Chambers said he supported the call for Shell to
process the gas at sea. They had to be realistic and take on board the advice of
the executive and the legal advice but to date no resolution of the issue had
been found and it was a time to focus minds. The public in general wanted to see
the gas delivered but only if it was safe to do so. The council had taken a
decision on the gas in the best interests of the county and it was done in an
open, frank, professional and transparent way.
They were now confronted with a different situation with five
people in jail. There was a need for dialogue to seek the means whereby the men
could be released and returned to their homes. The council had to be prepared to
look at the Shell to Sea option. He rejected Cllr Murray’s suggestion that the
government was a Third World government. If there were corrupt politicians then
they should be exposed but not all politicians should be branded. There was a
need to address some fundamental issues that had been brought into focus by the
action of the Rossport Five, issues such as the deficiency of infrastructure and
jobs in north Mayo. “We are not turncoats, we are realists seeking to get a
solution and get the five men out of jail,” he added.
Cllr Michelle Mulherin said her hope was that they could get
some forward movement from the present stalemate. People had talked about
division in the area. People were picketed and given a hard time, the seeds of
discord were being sown and politicians were being blamed for being negligent.
The reality was that the Minister and the government had made a hames of the
(consent for the) upstream pipeline. She did not wish to be political on the
issue but the reality was that Fianna Fail dealt with the matter with undue
haste prior to the last general election. They were now left with a serious
health and safety issue that served only to enhance the profits of a
multi-national company. She would not want to live alongside the pipeline and if
the independent safety audit showed the proposal to be unsafe then the gas would
have to be processed at sea and nobody was saying anything contrary to that.
Cllr Johnny O’Malley said people’s live were being disrupted.
They were torn apart and upside down and the sad part of that was that it could
have been avoided. He had spent a number of hours in the area and had visited
some of the families. He was totally in support of the people in jail and wanted
them released immediately. It was necessary to understand how these men had
turned bogland into productive green pasture. It had been done through their
“blood, sweat and tears” and provided an understanding of their attachment to
the land. “I would not like this pipeline running by my land and god forbid that
they find gas out from my house,” added Mr O’Malley. He said Shell had to do the
sensible thing and move to sea with the processing. How could they expect to
work for fifteen years in the area with the community against them.
Cllr Jarlath Munnelly said he was amazed at the u-turn done
by Cllrs Quinn and Chambers. He wondered had they been to Damascus as their
conversion was on a par with that of Saul. They were indulging in purely
political opportunism, a fact that was to be seen clearly when one looked at the
Fianna Fail benches and noted how few of the FF members were in attendance. He
had to question the bona fides of Fianna Fail and their commitment to Cllr
Quinn’s motion. He said as far as he was concerned Mr Garavan (Shell to Sea
spokesman) had hit the nail on the head when he observed that nobody has
responsibility for the upstream pipeline.
“That’s the issue and that is what must now, even at this
late stage, be addressed. The safety review is the first step in that process
and it is rather strange that the Fianna Fail members come in here and talk as
if they were not in government when these failures were allowed to happen,” he
said. He described the Fianna Fail performance as nothing more than a stunt and
“if hand-wringing was an Olympic sport Fianna Fail would have a gold medal for
their performance.”
“This (Quinn) motion is cheap and the efforts being made here
would be better deployed in the offices of the Minister or the Taoiseach,” said
Cllr Munnelly as he called for an end to the “showboating.”
Cllr Patsy O’Brien said no matter what the council did, it
would not make any impression on Shell. When an Bord Pleanala turned down the
planning there was a huge outcry to have the gas brought ashore. Now with the
Rossport Five in jail it was being used as a political football. The Fianna Fail
members were jumping on the bandwagon and he did not like that. The opposition
could have been avoided if the pipeline had been brought up the Bellanaboy river
and for the issue to have got to the present stage was beyond belief. Shell knew
there was opposition to the upstream pipeline and yet they ploughed ahead. It
was time for the Minister to tell Shell to lift the injunction. He added that
what Gerry Coyle had to endure was totally wrong. There was no better man to
fight for the people of Erris.
Cllr Gerry Coyle said there had been a lot of truths,
untruths, misconceptions and misrepresentations about the project. He was pro
gas, pro Erris and pro Mayo. He did not try to ride two horses at one time and
was not about to jeopardise the future of the council by doing something daft.
He had nothing but respect for the people of Rossport and knew 97% of those who
picketed his premises. Many of them could not look him straight in the eye
because they knew Statoil would not lose any sleep over the picket. He knew he
had caused hurt but he was not going to be a hypocrite. While he was on the
council he would stand against hypocrisy and told the Fianna Fail members “the
game is up for ye.”
Cllr Eddie Staunton said he was for the gas but he did not
agree with the episode that had taken place on Friday (picketing office of Enda
Kenny). His heart went out to the people who were in jail and getting them out
was the priority. While the men were in jail it would not cost him a thought if
the gas never came in. He did not wish to be personal with Tim Quinn but the
reality was that even his colleagues in Fianna Fail did not stand with him. “If
they had faith in your motion they would be here,” he added.
Cllr Michael Holmes said he had signed for the meeting out of
a sense of duty to the men in jail. After three and a half hours of debate he
was having second thoughts because it was clear how the decision was going to
go. Fianna Fail were the downfall of their own motion as they were not there to
support it. The Rossport Five were no closer to getting out of jail and the
meeting was only prolonging the agony for them. The reality was that the whole
deal would have to be renegotiated and the Rossport Five should not have to
spend even one minute longer in jail.
Cllr Paddy McGuinness rejected the suggestion that the
meeting was a shambles and was worthless. Cllr Holmes had looked for the meeting
and then had a go at both the political parties while at the same time failing
to submit a motion himself or make any suggestion as to how the matter could be
moved forward.
Fine Gael had taken the issue seriously. They had used their
best judgement to bring forward a motion that could get some movement. The
council could not get the men out of jail, they could not let them out but they
could take the matter to the people who had a duty to seek to resolve the issue.
“We believe that dialogue is necessary to get movement and that is what out
motion will achieve,” he said. He added that he was opposing the Quinn motion
because it would leave the council open to legal action and would not achieve
anything in terms of getting the men out of jail.
Cllr Tom Connolly said the inactivity of Minister Dempsey was
absolutely shameful and deplorable. He said that Deputy Cowley had acted
disgracefully in picketing Enda Kenny’s office… a remark that brought a rebuke
from Dr Cowley who was in the public gallery.
Cllr Joe Mellett said the Rossport Five had the support of
100% of people in the county. Nobody wanted to see them in jail. They would have
to forget politics and be fully behind any move that could secure their release.
He hoped the independent safety review would provide some answers and lead to
the release of the men.
Cllr Margaret Adams said she felt sorry for the people of
Rossport who had to listen to all the “back-clapping and back-stabbing” that
members were indulging in. There were genuine reasons why the absent Fianna Fail
members could not be present.
Cllr Austin F O’Malley said he had come to the meeting
expecting to hear about the release of the Rossport Five. Instead all he heard
was about Shell. He could not understand why the Taoiseach and his Ministers
were not making any effort to secure the release of the men. Instead of playing
games the Fianna Fail members should be sitting on the Taoiseach’s lap demanding
action. It was a disgrace to see the wives of the Rossport Five with tears in
their eyes and everyone, FF, FG, Sinn Fein, Labour and Independents should be
united to get the men out.
“Those men did absolutely nothing except stand up for their
rights and it is a disgrace. Bertie is getting away with murder and the Fianna
Fail members are allowing him. If anywhere should be recalled it is the Dail
that should be in session to try to resolve this issue,” he declared.
Replying to the debate Cllr Quinn denied that it was a cheap
stunt. He had proposed the same motion on July 18 and had no control over what
happened later. He had raised the matter at the Fianna Fail caucus and got 100
per cent support for his Shell to sea proposal. He took exception to the remarks
made against him personally. He had declared his support for the gas but with
the proviso that it be brought ashore safely. “When I believe in a cause I will
fight for it. Five weeks ago I met the Five in Cloverhill, I met with Dempsey
and O’Cuiv and I met with Shell. I am not defending the Minister, I say what I
think and I have the courage of my convictions and I am now putting my motion
because I am convinced that there is no solution to this deadlock unless Shell
agrees to process the gas at sea,” he said.
When the motion was put the following voted for: Cllrs Adams,
Carty, Chambers, Holmes, Moloney, Murray, Johnny O’Malley, Quinn and Ryan.
Voting against were Cllrs Connolly, Coyle, Cribbin, Kenny, McGuinness, Mee,
Mellett, Mulherin, Munnelly, O’Brien, O’Malley (Austin F), Staunton and Weir.
The motion was declared lost by 9 votes to 13.
http://www.westernpeople.ie/news/story.asp?j=26658
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