Antelope Valley Press

Feeling energy squeeze, UK considers fracking

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LONDON (AP) — The British government, on Tuesday, ordered scientists to take a new look at the risks of fracking, as soaring fuel prices and squeezed supplies prompt a rethink about the country’s energy supply.

Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng asked the British Geological Survey to review the evidence and report by June “on the geological science of shale gas fracturing and the modelling of seismic activity in shale rocks in the UK.”

Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, involves pumping water and chemicals at high pressure to fracture shale rock and release gas. The process has long been controvers­ial in Britain, with attempts to establish a fracking industry meeting strong opposition from environmen­talists.

The government suspended fracking in November 2019, saying it was not possible to accurately predict tremors associated with the drilling. That looked like a fatal blow to the industry as Britain sought to move away from fossil fuels and cut UK carbon emissions to net zero by 2050.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — and the sanctions imposed by the West on Russia, a major oil and gas supplier — have made countries including the UK rethink their energy supplies with the goal of reducing dependence on imported fuel. The fossil fuel industry and some lawmakers are pressing Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve government to end the fracking ban and to increase the extraction of North Sea oil and gas.

Kwarteng said it was important to keep “all possible energy generation and production methods on the table.”

He added that the pause on fracking would remain “unless the latest scientific evidence demonstrat­es that shale gas extraction is safe, sustainabl­e and of minimal disturbanc­e to those living and working nearby.”

Cuadrilla Resources Ltd., which operated Britain’s only active shale wells until 2019, welcomed the review as a “tentative first step” towards overturnin­g the moratorium.

“We trust that this review will allow Britain’s huge shale gas resources to be exploited,” said chief executive Francis Egan.

But Friends of the Earth energy activist Danny Gross said “energy efficiency and developing the UK.s vast renewable power potential are the best ways to deal with the energy crisis and bring down soaring fuel bills.”

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