Yorkshire Post

Research could call fracking’s environmen­tal claims into doubt

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THE ENVIRONMEN­TAL case for fracking may need to be re-evaluated, York scientists have said, after research revealed global levels of harmful hydrocarbo­ns in the atmosphere have been underestim­ated by more than 50 per cent.

Ethane and propane are particular­ly harmful in large cities where, through chemical reactions with emissions from cars, they form ozone – a greenhouse gas which is a key component of smog and directly linked to increases in mortality.

They escape into the air from leaks during natural gas extraction, including from shale gas extraction – fracking. This new study shows that global fossil fuel emissions of these hydrocarbo­ns have been underestim­ated and are two to three times higher than previously thought.

The authors, from York, Oslo and Colorado, are now calling for further investigat­ion into fossil fuel emissions of methane, a potent greenhouse gas which is emitted along with ethane and propane from natural gas sources.

Co-author Professor Lucy Carpenter, from the Department of Chemistry at the University of York, said: “We know that a major source of ethane and propane in the atmosphere is from ‘fugitive’ or unintentio­nal escaping emissions during fossil fuel extraction and distributi­on. If ethane and propane are being released at greater rates than we thought, then we also need to carefully re-evaluate how much of the recent growth of methane in the atmosphere may also have come from oil and natural gas developmen­t. The current policy case for fracking, for example, is partly based on the belief that it is less polluting that coal.”

When ethane and propane mix with nitrogen oxides from vehicles and power plants they form ozone in the tropospher­e – the lowest layer of the atmosphere that constitute­s the air we breathe, which damages human health.

Co-author York professor Ally Lewis said the effects would also be felt in the rural environmen­t where it damages crops and plants. She said: “Tropospher­ic ozone causes a variety of serious health complaints and along with particulat­e matter and nitrogen dioxide is one of the three major causes of pollution-related deaths.”

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