Lancaster Climate Action blockade A.E.Yates, met with violent response

CAMPAIGNERS gath­ered out­side a Bolton engi­neer­ing firm this morn­ing protest­ing about its role in a forth­com­ing frack­ing project in Lan­cashire.

PROTEST: The two campaigners lying in the road

Two anti-frack­ing cam­paign­ers lie down in road to pre­vent access at AE Yates, Lostock Indus­tri­al Estate

CAMPAIGNERS gath­ered out­side a Bolton engi­neer­ing firm this morn­ing protest­ing about its role in a forth­com­ing frack­ing project in Lan­cashire.

Two women from Lan­cast­er Cli­mate Action block­ad­ed them­selves at the entrance of AE Yates Ltd at the Lostock Indus­tri­al Estate block­ing all vehi­cle move­ment on site for around three hours.

They were met with a vio­lent response from work­ers who endan­gered life and limb by assault­ing pro­tes­tors.

Last year The Bolton News report­ed how AE Yates had secured a £1.5 mil­lion con­tract to build a shale gas explo­ration site at Lit­tle Plump­ton site in Lan­cashire by drilling firm Cuadrilla.

Rose White, of Lan­cast­er Cli­mate Action, said: “There is a strong, sus­tain­able and swelling cam­paign against the frack­ing indus­try.

“Cam­paign­ers have a thor­ough analy­sis of both the indus­try itself and the polit­i­cal con­text around it and are hit­ting hard at weak spots and bot­tle necks.

“The block­ades, both here and else­where, have result­ing in all work being halt­ed.

“That, along with actions like today’s tar­get­ing of the sup­ply chain in Bolton, is mak­ing investors very ner­vous.

“At a time when they should have been rock­et­ing upwards, shares in the frack­ing com­pa­nies main source of fund­ing are crash­ing down.

“Soon they won’t have the sup­port of the peo­ple and very soon they won’t have the sup­port from investors either.”

One of the women stag­ing the protest, Sarah Shore, said that action was need­ed to send a mes­sage to all busi­ness­es in the frack­ing sup­ply chain.

She said: “If you’re sup­ply­ing an indus­try that caus­es cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change, pol­lutes the air we breathe, pol­lutes our pre­mi­um farm­ing land and our drink­ing water, then you should expect to be dis­rupt­ed.”

Katie Marsh, anoth­er cam­paign­er at the block­ade said that the action is much big­ger than just a frack­ing issue.

She said: “It’s also about democ­ra­cy. After months of care­ful con­sid­er­a­tion, Lan­cashire Coun­ty Coun­cil said no to frack­ing, how­ev­er, cen­tral gov­ern­ment inter­vened and gave the green light to frack in what some Tories are call­ing the ‘des­o­late North’.

“This clear­ly high­lights the com­plete dis­re­gard West­min­ster has for local democ­ra­cy and for our won­der­ful coun­ty.”

Paul Boron, man­ag­ing direc­tor at AE Yates said: “These protests have been going on since the begin­ning of Jan­u­ary.

“Today peo­ple lay down in front of our gates and pre­vent­ed our wag­ons from get­ting in or out of the site for a few hours.

“We called police who arrived with­in the hour before the pro­tes­tors were moved on some­time after 9.30am.

“It gen­er­al­ly dis­rupts busi­ness but it is just some­thing that we have to deal with.

“I hope that the police will con­tin­ue to sup­port us.”

A spokesper­son from GMP said: “Police were called at around 8.20am on to reports of a group of pro­tes­tors on Cran­field Road, Lostock Indus­tri­al Estate.

“Offi­cers attend­ed and the pro­tes­tors left the scene.”