google-site-verification: googlec7193c3de77668c9.html

Government urged to close ‘loophole’ allowing mini fracking | Science, Climate & Tech News

Plans for a “mini fracking” site in Burniston near Scarborough have been rejected by North Yorkshire Council following local outcry.

Campaigners have vowed to fight other proposed mini fracking sites in England and are lobbying the UK government to close what they call a “loophole” in the fracking moratorium so that it includes mini fracking sites.

Europa Oil and Gas wants to extract gas from the sandstone beneath this field in Broughton, near Scarborough, North Yorkshire
Image:
Europa Oil and Gas wants to extract gas from the sandstone beneath this field in Broughton, near Scarborough, North Yorkshire

Europa Oil and Gas, which is applying for an exploratory well at the Burniston site, said it could extract at least 41 billion cubic feet of gas, powering the equivalent of 130,000 homes at its peak.

It says it will appeal the decision, adding that mini fracking is “completely safe”.

Councillors said they were “minded” to oppose it, pending further guidance expected from central government.

Fracking was effectively banned in England in 2019 after tremors of up to 2.9 in magnitude were recorded at a site near Preston New Road in Lancashire.

But a handful of proposals to do a “mini frack” – as the regulator the Environment Agency describes it – are currently working their way through England’s planning system, including in West Newton in East Yorkshire and Wressle in North Lincolnshire.

More from Science, Climate & Tech

Industry points out the practice has been carried out dozens of times before in the UK, with no record of any tremors, including at an existing well in Wressle.

WHAT IS FRACKING?

Fracking is a method of extracting oil and gas dispersed in rock underground.

It involves drilling downwards or horizontally, then pumping in great volumes of fluid at high pressure to fracture the rock, releasing the fuels trapped inside.

It usually targets shale rock, which is very tightly compacted, hence needing to crack it open.

Proppant squeeze, referred to as “mini fracking” by the England and Wales regulator the Environment Agency, in theory uses lower volumes of fluid and targets other, more permeable types of rock that require less force to crack them open.

The method, known as proppant squeeze, is supposed to carry a lower risk of triggering earthquakes than full scale hydraulic fracturing in shale rock.

But such earthquakes are impossible to predict, and very little is known about how Britain’s geology reacts of any form of fracking. The unpredictability is why fracking has been unpopular in the UK.

The amount of gas Britain could retrieve from mini fracking is also unknown, but thought to be less than the major fields remaining offshore.

The Burniston site came up against 1,400 objections.

Local campaigners fear the proposed mini fracking project could trigger minor earthquakes and is at odds with efforts to slow climate change
Image:
Local campaigners fear the proposed mini fracking project could trigger minor earthquakes and is at odds with efforts to slow climate change

Fracking ‘loophole’

The Labour government has pledged to make the de facto fracking ban permanent.

Campaigners at Friends of the Earth are urging it to close the “loophole” in the ban.

Friends of the Earth wants the government to close the 'loophole' in the fracking ban
Image:
Friends of the Earth wants the government to close the ‘loophole’ in the fracking ban

Its climate campaigner Tony Bosworth said ministers “must protect communities from fracking by the back door, by ensuring that this includes all types of fracking – including proppant squeeze”.

Officials indicated they had no intention to do so.

A spokesperson said: “We will ban fracking for good and make Britain a clean energy superpower to protect current and future generations.”

While Labour promised in its manifesto to end new oil and gas projects, it said it would honour those areas that already had some form of licence, including for exploration, allowing some to still go ahead.

Advertisements


Source link

Views: 1

See also  How 1 man got scammed in seconds using Google

Check Also

The Trump phone still isn’t real

Last week Trump Mobile overhauled its website, in the process officially revealing the updated design …

‘Apex’ Review: Charlize Theron Netflix Thriller Avoids Rock Bottom, but Barely

Apex, a new survival thriller from director Baltasar Kormákur, debuts on Netflix Friday. The film …

I don’t think Gwyneth Paltrow knows what a peptide is

This is Optimizer, a weekly newsletter sent every Friday from Verge senior reviewer Victoria Song …

Leave a Reply

Available for Amazon Prime