Police expect an extra 1,000 campaigners at the protest site this weekend
About 100 activists had arrived at the camp by Friday lunchtime
Organisers plan to hold a series of workshops on Saturday and Sunday
Cuadrilla said it was scaling back drilling during the event for safety reasons
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Activists have descended on a test drilling site in West Sussex as part of a six-day protest camp.
Energy firm Cuadrilla is looking for oil near the village of Balcombe, but has not ruled out using the controversial technique of fracking to release shale gas.
Police believe up to 1,000 extra people will join existing protesters to begin a campaign of civil disobedience.
Cuadrilla has scaled back the test drilling on police advice.
However, its chief executive Francis Egan said drilling would continue at the site as soon as it was safe to do so.
He said: "The protest camp is scheduled to be there for I think five or six days.
"But we'll work closely with the police. We are intending to restart, we are intending to finish the well."
'No permission'
The No Dash For Gas protest group said it was in a "working relationship" with the farmer who owns the land where they have based their protest camp.
However, Richard Ponsford, who owns Sidney Farm, said the activists came on his land without his permission.
Mr Ponsford, 59, said: "About three or four vans came on to the field and they spent about three hours barricading the field in.
"I certainly did not give my permission. There is no way I would have allowed them in at all."
The BBC's Angus Crawford said fashion designer Vivienne Westwood joined about 100 activists who arrived at Balcombe at 13:00 BST.
Some of the protesters were waving anti-fracking banners and others were wearing Guy Fawkes masks, which have become a feature of demonstrations around the world.
Cuadrilla is drilling a 3,000ft (900m) vertical well and a 2,500ft (750m) horizontal bore, but said fracking for shale gas would need fresh permission.
Environmental campaigners have been camped at the site for the past three weeks, with about 40 people arrested in that time.
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