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Welsh Government could have blocked controversial coal mining licence at Aberpergwm say º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Coal Authority

However the Welsh Government insists it had no devolved powers to stop an extension to an already approved license

Aberpergwm mine, also known as Aberpergwm colliery, is a coal mine near Glynneath, Neath Port Talbot operated by Energybuild Mining Ltd.(Image: Copyright Unknown)

A controversial coal mine at Aberpergwm near Glynneath, which last week was given approval to mine a further 40 million tonnes of coal, could have been blocked by the Welsh Government, the Coal Authority insists.

In a statement to BusinessLive Wales, a spokesperson from the authority (part of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government) said it had previously engaged with the Welsh Government for any input it might have wanted to give under the Wales Act 2017 as part of the application’s determination process.

The spokesperson said: “On 10 January 2022, the Welsh Government informed the Coal Authority that Welsh ministers will not be making a determination in this case.”

When asked more specifically what would have happened had the Welsh Government launched an objection to the licence, the Coal Authority confirmed that it would have been legally required not to issue the mining licence to Energybuild, the company that owns the mine.

The spokesperson said: “Under the Wales Act 2017, if Welsh Ministers had directed us not to licence the mine’s expansion, we could not have issued a full licence to the operator.”

The coal board did not expand further on which devolved powers under the Wales Act 2017 would have prevented it from issuing the licence had the Welsh Government objected.

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As part of the application process to operate a coal mine, the operator needs relevant rights and permissions, including planning permission.

Energybuild secured planning permission to expand the mine in September 2018 from Neath Port Talbot Council — a key step in the approval process of the application.