Greenpeace on lifting of fracking moratorium



Responding to the lifting of the fracking moratorium in the UK, Greenpeace Energy Campaigner Leila Deen said:

"George
Osborne's dream of building Dallas in Lancashire is dangerous fantasy.
He is not JR Ewing and this is not the US. Energy analysts agree the UK
cannot replicate the American experience of fracking, and that shale gas
will do little or nothing to lower bills.

“Pinning
the UK’s energy hopes on an unsubstantiated, polluting fuel is a massive
gamble and consumers and the climate will end up paying the price.”

Greenpeace Freedom of Information requests (FoIs) demonstrate the risks of fracking across England. They reveal the Environment
Agency (the Government department responsible for regulating the
fracking industry) has private fears, which it expressed to Number 10 -
over threats to drinking water near proposed fracking sites in Sussex.
(1)

The FoIs also:

  • show that the Environment Agency and DECC sought advice from oil and gas giant Exxon on fracking regulations (2)
  • suggest
    the Environment Agency was under pressure from the Government to find
    ways of making fracking more acceptable to the British public, even as
    ministers were publicly insisting no decisions had been made (3)

A full Greenpeace briefing on fracking can be found here: http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/document/shale-gas-silver-bullet

ENDS

For more information contact Greenpeace press officer Kathy Cumming on 07801212959

  1. Drinking water threat in West Sussex

    (https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/482162-rishale.html)

In
April this year concerns were raised in the Sussex Village of Balcombe
over proposals by US firm Cuadrilla to drill for shale in the area.

Cuadrilla has planning permission for exploratory drilling at Balcombe but residents became alarmed after a study by Durham University suggested that fractures from drilling for shale gas could reach the water supply.

The documents show how the concerns reached the then energy minister Charles Hendry.


Mr
Hendry was initially sent guidance given by the Environment Agency to
the Prime Minister at a high level briefing on shale in the spring.

The guidance, over groundwater was unequivocal, and potentially limiting to shale gas extraction in the UK:

‘The
Environment Agency would not allow hydraulic fracking to take place in
an area where there are aquifers used to supply drinking water. If there
were sensitive ground waters present in an area where a company wanted
to carry out hydraulic fracturing, we would object during the company’s
planning application and refuse to grant an environmental permit.’

But
that was not released to the public. Instead the EA’s head of climate
change suggested the wording be changed in order not to provide “too
stark” a stance.

“I am a bit concerned that the two sentences we
provided to.....provided a too stark view of our position of where we
would or would not be happy with shale gas developments in relation to
potable ground water aquifers. We take a risk based approach to
permitting.... Can I ask that you do not use the two sentences from
…..... while we finesse them.”

  1. The involvement of Exxon, and the major climate risk
    https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/482227-rishale3.html

Because
methane gas when unburnt is 21 times worse for the climate than carbon
dioxide any leakage of the gas from fracking could significantly
increase the impact of shale gas on the climate. The argument was given
further weight by the publication of atmospheric data in the respected journal, Nature but has been disputed by the oil and gas industry - especially Exxon.


The Environmental Protection Agency in the US is putting new regulations in place, so that wells will have to capture the methane.

These
regulations would insist on so-called ‘green completions’ which oblige
operators to capture water from fracking and ensure methane is not
released into the environment.

But the documents we’ve obtained
suggest UK regulators remain undecided on how to deal with the problem
and are seeking advice from industry and especially Exxon on what should
be done.

In one email an official at the Department of Energy and Climate change notes:

“I
did raise this question at the UKOOG (Onshore Operators Group)”, said
one email “they had not planned to integrate green completions into
their guidance (which is a big challenge already with fracking and well
integrity issues). But they will consider adding it to the guidelines if
we insist.”

Officials turned to Exxon for guidance.

In an
email noting the Nature study a DECC official wrote to the oil giant’s
executives, “it would be very helpful if there were any sources of good
data available of actual emissions from operators, is anyone working on
this?”

Shockingly, through a series of further emails to arrange a
meeting DECC officials also asked for help drafting the fracking
guidelines.

“I’d also be interested in any views on what industry can do to develop best practice codes etc to help reassure the public.”

The
documents also show that Exxon’s meeting with DECC in May followed an
earlier meeting with the Environment Agency’s chief executive, Tony
Grayling  and its climate advisor Martin Diaper also on the topic of
shale in April.

The meeting allowed Exxon to present its case on the merits of fracking to the regulators. (https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/525354-presentation.html)”

  1. Pressure put onto the fracking regulator, the Environment Agency
    https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/482983-sb-3-annex-c.html

The documents also reveal how the EA’s risk assessment on shale may have been driven as much by PR as scientific concerns.

A
briefing on a proposed environmental risk assessment of fracking by the
EA notes that the project must be completed quickly to allow the
industry to develop noting, “development of the bowland shale gas field
could start in 2013” and suggests the project is designed mainly to
‘clarify’ the agencies existing pro-fracking stance.

In his
conclusion to the briefing document the EA’s advisor on climate change,
Martin Diaper writes “Government policy is clear, it wants the industry
to develop. However the main barrier to the development of the industry
is the public perception of the risk it poses to the environment.”

“Our
current understanding is that these risks can be controlled through
effective regulation and the project aims to clarify that we have the
controls necessary to protect the environment. It will show the
Environment Agency as responsive to government policy and public
perceptions whilst ensuring effective regulation of the new industry.”


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