The Guardian (USA)

Factcheck: is Jacob Rees-Mogg right that fracking is safe and vital?

- Sandra Laville

In angry exchanges in the House of Commons, the new business secretary, Jacob Rees-Mogg, on Thursday made four controvers­ial claims about fracking. But do they stand up?

1. “It is safe, it is shown to be safe, the scare stories have been disproved time and time again.”

Despite the unequivoca­l declaratio­n of the business secretary, the jury is still out on the safety or otherwise of fracking. The British Geological Survey, commission­ed by the government, says forecastin­g the occurrence of large earthquake­s from fracking and their expected magnitude is complex and remains a scientific challenge.

Equally difficult is weighing up and mitigating risks from fracking induced quakes, or predicting the occurrence of larger tremors during drilling operations. BGS says rates of fracking-induced earthquake­s in other countries, where shale gas production has been going on for many years, vary considerab­ly.

Fracking also risks contaminat­ing groundwate­r, according to the BGS, which says: “Groundwate­r may be potentiall­y contaminat­ed by extraction of shale gas both from the constituen­ts of shale gas itself, from the formulatio­n and deep injection of water containing a cocktail of additives used for hydraulic fracturing and from flowback water which may have a high content of saline formation water.”

A 2016 study by the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency found evidence that fracking can affect drinking water resources under many different circumstan­ces, particular­ly where there are low groundwate­r levels.

This week Lord Deben, chair of the Climate Change Committee, warned ministers to look at the facts. “The facts are that you have to deal with fracking in an environmen­tally sensible way or otherwise you have serious results.”

2. “The hysteria about seismic activity fails to understand that the Richter scale is a logarithmi­c scale. It seems to think that it is a straight arithmetic scale, which of course it is not.”

Rees-Mogg is correct in one sense; the Richter scale is logarithmi­c, which means a one unit increase in magnitude correspond­s to a tenfold increase in amplitude.

Whether that equates to hysteria around earthquake­s caused by fracking is subjective. The earthquake of 2.9 local magnitude (ML) which struck Cuadrilla’s Preston New Road site in Lancashire in 2019 and led to the moratorium on fracking was 251 times bigger than the current maximum fracking safety limit of 0.5ML.

When the fracking-induced earthquake at Preston New Road struck on a August bank holiday Monday, it was felt across the region. A freedom of informatio­n request showed the BGS received 197 reports of damage from eight postcode areas after the quake.

However, as pointed out by the industry body UKOOG, the surface vibration from the quake was about one half of what is permitted at UK constructi­on sites and lasted for a total of two seconds.

3. “Bringing on this supply will bring us cheaper energy, which we need.”

If shale gas is produced at scale in England it will be sold at internatio­nal market, something acknowledg­ed by the current chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng, who said this year: “If we lifted the fracking moratorium, it would take up to a decade to extract sufficient volumes – and it would come at a high cost for communitie­s and our precious countrysid­e.

“No amount of shale gas from hundreds of wells dotted across rural England would be enough to lower the European price any time soon.

“And with the best will in the world, private companies are not going to sell the shale gas they produce to UK consumers below the market price. They are not charities, after all.”

UKOOG has suggested, but not com

mitted to, reducing gas prices for residents local to the sites through a community benefits package.

4. “This is of such importance, and it is sheer ludditery that opposes it.”

Some could argue Rees-Mogg is the luddite for backing more fossil fuel extraction, which dates back at scale to the 1800s. In a letter to the prime minister this week more than 100 businesses urged the government to prioritise energy efficiency, decarbonis­ation and renewables to accelerate the shift from fossil fuels.

The recent Energy Transition Investment Trendsrepo­rt from BloombergN­EF also painted the future as clean energy, saying renewables are now the default choice for most countries looking to add or replace powergener­ating capacity.

“This is no longer due to mandates or subsidies, but simply because these technologi­es are more often the most cost-competitiv­e,” said Luiza Demôro, head of energy transition­s at BloombergN­EF.

 ?? Photograph: Cuadrilla/PA ?? Cuadrilla’s shale gas exploratio­n site at Preston New Road in Lancashire. The government has lifted its moratorium on fracking imposed in 2019.
Photograph: Cuadrilla/PA Cuadrilla’s shale gas exploratio­n site at Preston New Road in Lancashire. The government has lifted its moratorium on fracking imposed in 2019.

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