Energy company Cuadrilla has started test drilling for oil in the countryside - as anti-fracking protests enter a ninth day.
The project has been subject to days of delays because of high-profile protests designed to halt delivery of trucks and equipment to the plant.
But the energy company confirmed that equipment had now been tested and test drilling had begun.
A Cuadrilla spokesman said: "We started test drilling at 11.15am, and we will do a 3,000ft vertical well. We will be there for two to three months."
Campaigners fear the project at Lower Stumble, near Balcombe, West Sussex, could lead Cuadrilla to go on to conduct hydraulic fracturing, or fracking.
The controversial method of fracking involves high pressure liquid being pumped deep underground to split shale rock and release gas supplies.
Protests have entered their ninth dayOpponents of fracking have highlighted concerns about potential water contamination and environmental damage, as well as small-scale earthquakes.
Police have had to throw up a daily security operation around the test site's entrance as dozens of anti-fracking protesters have turned out to halt deliveries.
Sussex Police confirmed two people - a man and a 19-year-old woman - were arrested on Friday on suspicion of assaulting police officers. More than 30 people have been detained since last Friday, mainly on suspicion of obstructing deliveries.
This week Cuadrilla's chief executive, Francis Egan, reacted to concerns surrounding the drilling.
He said his firm has "no intention of ruining the countryside and won't ruin the countryside".
Police contained protesters who were stopping vehicles accessing the siteMr Egan insisted hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, was safe and would not pose a threat to the public or people's drinking water.
He said "significant" amounts of oil and gas could be made available through fracking in the UK.
But he acknowledged his firm's activities had been delayed as a result of protests against its exploratory drilling activities in West Sussex.
The sensitivity of the subject was highlighted after former Government energy adviser Lord Howell issued an apology for suggesting fracking could be used in "desolate" North East England without any impact on the surrounding environment.
Lord Howell went on to provoke further criticism when he tried to clarify his comments by suggesting he actually meant "unloved" areas in the North West, such as Lancashire.
His attempt at clearing up the controversy prompted Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg to urge Lord Howell to be quiet.
Mr Clegg also suggested that the Conservatives were getting "over-excited" about the controversial extraction technique's potential benefits.
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