Local residents protest at Lodge Farm open cast site

At noon on Sat­ur­day 1st Novem­ber, around 40 peo­ple braved rain and cold winds to protest out­side the new open cast min­ing site at Lodge Farm, in Smal­l­ey Der­byshire.

Lodge House residents' demo 1Lodge House residents' demo 4

At noon on Sat­ur­day 1st Novem­ber, around 40 peo­ple braved rain and cold winds to protest out­side the new open cast min­ing site at Lodge Farm, in Smal­l­ey Der­byshire.

UK Coal, which owns the site, plans to extract one mil­lion tonnes of coal from the 300 acre site over the next four years.

From the out­set, UK Coal’s plans were opposed by local res­i­dents, sev­er­al MPs and Amber Val­ley dis­trict coun­cil, and Der­byshire Coun­ty Coun­cil refused plan­ning per­mis­sion for the open cast site. How­ev­er UK Coal appealed the deci­sion and fol­low­ing an appeal hear­ing, com­mu­ni­ties sec­re­tary Ruth Kel­ly over­rode ordi­nary people’s con­cerns in favour of UK Coal’s inter­ests and agreed that the scheme could go ahead.

Saturday’s protest was organ­ised by Ere­wash and Amber Val­ley Envi­ron­ment Net­work, EAVON, and was just the lat­est in a long series of protests and direct actions by peo­ple con­cerned at the local and glob­al effects of coal.

Speak­ing to the Ilke­ston Adver­tis­er, pri­or to the protest, Neil Pad­get, from The Smal­l­ey Action Group, said: “Open­cast min­ing at Lodge House is bad enough, and the nation­al prece­dent that has been set by the gov­ern­ment, in allow­ing this, is appalling.

Many locals also fear, and with good rea­son, that UK Coal will be giv­en per­mis­sion to extend the site, and that min­ing in the local area may go on for decades.”

While there are jus­ti­fi­able fears for the impact on the local com­mu­ni­ty, many of Saturday’s plac­ards demon­strat­ed that pro­test­ers were equal­ly con­cerned with the wider effects on cli­mate chaos of coal burn­ing.