fiona from scotland on the oil industry

My name's Fiona, Scottish as you can tell by my accent. I live next to a petro-chemical industries. I have depression. If anyone knows anything about mental health, it affects one in four Scottish people sometime in their lives. It affects all your senses. It's very uncomfortable to live with such things. I'd just like you to take a few minutes to think of what it's like for people like myself who are on the ground level. Who have to live their lives 24/7 in such conditions. We have to eat, breathe, sleep, live, have our children, look after our grandmothers in this kind of situation. We've got constant pollution in our lungs at all times. Our children are playing in these areas. They're sleeping in all this rubbish that comes out of the plants. It really is very uncomfortable and to be honest a little bit unfair. You can all walk away to your nice areas and we're stuck with it on our very doorsteps, literally our doorsteps. The pollution is smelly, very uncomfortable. You've got to have dark curtains at night time because you can't block out the light from light pollution. You've got smells. And there's nothing you can do. You can put as much air freshener as you want into your sitting room but you just can not get rid of the smell. You're stuck with it. So I'd just like you to take a few moments to yourselves, whether it be now or sometime in the future when you're thinking about your carbon trade and all your great ideas. Just think of the people on the ground who have to eat, sleep and breathe pollution of three different types. Thank you for your time.