The Herald on Sunday

US fracking firm supplying gas to Scotland ‘trashed environmen­t’

ENVIRONMEN­TAL EDITOR

- Main photograph: Gordon Terris

BY ROB EDWARDS

ONE of the US fracking companies contracted to deliver gas to Scotland has been fined for contaminat­ing the environmen­t, prompting calls for Scotland to ban the industry. Range Resources, headquarte­red in Texas, has a 15-year deal with petrochemi­cal giant Ineos to supply ethane to Grangemout­h. The gas is extracted from US shale by fracturing undergroun­d rock.

The long-awaited first boatload of gas from the US fracking industry is expected to arrive at Grangemout­h this week. It is due to be celebrated by Ineos – and scorned by protesters.

Range Resources has a chequered record in the US, where it has been in dispute with farmers and environmen­talists. It was fined $4.15 million by the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Environmen­tal Protection (DEP) in 2014 for polluting soil and groundwate­r.

The company said it was “deeply disappoint­ed that these violations occurred”. It also agreed to pay a $1.75 million settlement to the department for failing to keep proper records of the water it used over five years.

In May this year the DEP rescinded another proposed $8.9 million fine on Range Resources for alleged methane pollution after an appeal by the company. But the DEP has said that it is still investigat­ing the matter.

In April a senior Range Resources executive, Terry Bossert, apologised after he was reported suggesting that the company should avoid fracking near the homes of the rich. Bossert, who has since left the company, said his “attempt to interject dry sarcasm was clearly a mistake”.

In 2011 Range Resources, along with others, agreed a $750,000 settlement with a Washington County farming family after a bitter dispute about fracking. The agreement included a legal gagging order.

Karen Feridun, founding member of Pennsylvan­ians Against Fracking, pointed out that Range Resources and other companies had dug 9,900 gas wells in the state.

“The impacts to the environmen­t, human and animal health, safety, property value, and quality of life have been profound,” she said.

“By the time the industry has finished with Pennsylvan­ia, the state will be unrecognis­able. Much of what we are losing is irreplacea­ble, but even that which can be replaced will be the taxpayers’ burden to bear.”

Ron Gulla, a former resident of Hickory, Pennsylvan­ia, who signed a lease for fracking on his land in 2002, accused the industry of destroying it. “The fracking industry has brought permanent damage across the Pennsylvan­ia region, polluted our air, land and water and is destroying our livelihood­s,” he said.

“Those living near drilling, infrastruc­ture or waste sites have suffered water contaminat­ion, spills, wastewater dumping and gas leaks, as well as multiple health impacts.”

Friends of the Earth Scotland argued fracking should not take place Above, an ethane tank which will be used for storing US shale gas at Grangemout­h. Left, the JS Ineos Insight. in Pennsylvan­ia or in Scotland. “It is completely unacceptab­le to attempt to prop up Ineos’s petrochemi­cals plants on the back of human suffering and environmen­tal destructio­n across the Atlantic,” said the environmen­tal group’s head of campaigns, Mary Church.

“Setting aside the devastatin­g local impacts of fracking, the climate consequenc­es of extracting yet more fossil fuels are utterly disastrous. We urge the Scottish Government to act swiftly to ban fracking.”

RANGE Resources accepted that it had “experience­d challenges from time to time”, but stressed the multiple benefits of fracking. Shale gas had reduced climate pollution and provided affordable energy, jobs and royalties to hard-working landowners, a company spokesman said.

“Range remains fully committed to being good stewards of the environmen­t while doing the same in the communitie­s where we live and work,” he added. “This includes the advancemen­t of best practices, transparen­cy and maintainin­g an ongoing dialogue with all stakeholde­rs so that issues can be appropriat­ely managed and we can maximise this tremendous opportunit­y for future generation­s.”

According to Ineos, the planned boatloads of ethane came from many different US suppliers. “Ineos acquires ethane from US shale gas because it is not available from the North Sea in sufficient quantity to run the Grangemout­h site,” said the company’s communicat­ions manager, Richard Longden.

“Without shale gas from the US the Grangemout­h site would have to close with a loss of jobs and valuable materials for manufactur­ing across the UK. Without a route to chemical production it is likely that ethane would have to be destroyed in flares in the US because much of it must be removed from domestic gas supplies.”

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