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Council to discuss how to oppose carbon capture pipeline

Councillors in Wirral are to meet to discuss how to battle a proposal for a carbon capture pipeline which would run under the peninsula and include a maintenance works near Meols. 

The map of the proposed pipeline

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Councillors in Wirral are to meet to discuss how to battle a proposal for a carbon capture pipeline which would run under the peninsula and include a maintenance works near Meols. 

Peak Cluster’s proposal, which is designed to help the cement and lime industries reduce greenhouse gas emissions, would see producers in Derbyshire and Staffordshire each developing facilities at their sites.

They would be linked to a pipeline to transport the emissions through Cheshire and Wirral, then offshore to permanent storage in depleted gas reservoirs under the East Irish seabed near Morecombe.

The Chief Executive of Peak Cluster, John Egan, has previously told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) that the route through Wirral is “the most feasible”, and similar to the existing natural gas network which runs underground, albeit containing carbon dioxide.

The scheme has met with huge opposition since a consultation began earlier this year.

Under planning laws, the final decision will be taken by the government rather than the council due to it being what is known as a ‘Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project’.

An extraordinary meeting of the local authority has been called on Monday 9 March at Wallasey Town Hall, with Council Leader, Cllr Paula Basnett, among the signatories requesting elected members agree how to fight the plan.

The meeting requisition states: “We propose that Wirral Borough Council, all parties and stakeholders together, as a unified voice, stand firmly opposed to the Wirral being used as a dumping corridor for industries over 200km away. 

“Together, we call for the cancellation of the Peak Cluster project in its entirety, or, at the very least, we demand that these pipelines find alternative routes to the Irish Sea; routes that do not sacrifice our residents, our land, and our wildlife."

Three motions have been put forward for discussion, with proposed actions including writing to the government requesting the scheme be cancelled; for there to be an independently verified impact assessment, and the creation of a community benefit fund for areas impacted by the construction of the pipeline should it go ahead.

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