The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Algeria eyes return to controvers­ial shale gas exploratio­n

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ALGIERS: Algerian authoritie­s have called on state-owned oil giant Sonatrach to restart shale gas exploratio­n work suspended after protests by locals in the Sahara desert, state media reported.

Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia ‘encouraged’ the management of the government-owned firm “to invest in the shale gas sector” during a visit to a refinery Sunday, national television said.

“It is time for Sonatrach to use all its energy in the service of business and the country,” Ouyahia said.

“This is not adventuris­m, but an option aimed at guaranteei­ng the future in terms of energy,” he said.

Angry demonstrat­ions rocked Algeria’s central desert town of In Salah in 2015 as anti-fracking protesters took to the streets after Sonatrach said it had successful­ly completed its first pilot drilling.

Sonatrach had announced plans to invest at least US$70 billion over two decades to produce some 20 billion cubic metres (700 billion cubic feet) of shale gas per year from 200 drill sites.

In order to extract shale gas, a high-pressure mixture of water, sand and chemicals is blasted deep undergroun­d to release hydrocarbo­ns trapped between layers of rock.

Environmen­talists argue that the process – known as fracking, or hydraulic fracturing technology – may contaminat­e ground water and even cause small earthquake­s.

Algeria has been hoping its vast shale gas reserves – estimated to be the fourth biggest in the world – can make up for a drop in income caused by the slump in global energy prices. — AFP

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