Yorkshire Post

Fracking is far from a rosy future

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From: Sue Cuthbert, Newton on Rawcliffe.

LORRAINE Allanson (The

Yorkshire Post, July 21) tells us that Ryedale has had discreet gas wells for decades. True, but these are for convention­al gas extraction, not fracking with all its attendant infrastruc­ture.

She does not mention the amount of water which is used for one frack. This is the equivalent to two days of domestic use in two towns such as Malton and Norton. Who would take priority in days of water shortage?

A convention­al gas well versus a fracking well is like comparing a Roman candle firework to an active volcano.

I’m sure that all our farmers, and owners of tourist businesses, would wish to have Lorraine Allanson explain just exactly how fracking will benefit them.

I would like her to tell us what exactly are all these jobs which would be generated by having fracking sites nearby.

In Ryedale there are now thousands of local, well informed people who understand how dangerous this industry is. This comes from knowledge from the US and Australia.

A fracking well blowout about five months ago in the US caused the deaths of five workers. I am sure that their families do not find this industry at all safe. From: Glyn Wild, Highfield Terrace, Swinton, Malton.

LORRAINE Allanson continues to peddle the rosy industry PR image of shale gas extraction in Ryedale, but fails to address some of the key facts against it.

Cheaper energy – the low cost of shale gas in the US is due to overproduc­tion, a different energy market and companies basically making no profit.

Stable energy – the ‘proven’ amount of available shale gas is still not known and so we do not know how long it would last. Unless we were to catastroph­ically damage our environmen­t, then the renewable resources of the sun, wind and tide will last for millenia.

Jobs – Siemens in Hull is already providing quality engineerin­g jobs building wind turbines. Offshore wind farms create jobs in servicing them.

Cost – The Government is already propping up the shale gas industry with grants and tax breaks while reducing help to renewables and cancelling key long-term projects like the Swansea Bay tidal lagoon.

Impact – The few existing convention­al gas well heads in Ryedale have the benefit of 20 years of mature planting around them. Hundreds of new shale gas wells in the area will not have this screening and there will be the added impact during the processing phase of lorry transporta­tion, gas flaring, constructi­on of pipelines and the consumptio­n of large quantities of our currently scarce water resources. From: Steven White, Great Edstone, York.

LET’S get some facts straight regarding shale gas (Samuel Ribansky, The Yorkshire Post, July 17) in the wake of North Yorkshire’s draft Minerals Plan.

We don’t need to frack for energy security: the Government’s own report from October 2017 told us that we’re not sitting on “huge gas reserves”. The truth is nobody really knows how much is down there, but the best estimate from industryfu­nded research from April 2017 is slightly less than three years’ worth at current gas usage .

The Minerals Plan nonetheles­s suggested some sensible controls: no fracking within 500m of housing, three miles on average between well pads and so on. Sounds fair enough?

The frackers didn’t think so: to howls of outrage and claims of “an effective ban”, they let slip that fracking won’t work unless it’s right up against where people live. This could happen if they get their way on taking planning decisions out of local authority control, on which the Government is currently consulting. Concerned readers may wish to respond to this consultati­on.

 ??  ?? RULING: Sir Cliff Richard won damages against the BBC.
RULING: Sir Cliff Richard won damages against the BBC.

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