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Next UK fracker shrugs off shutdown risk, sees need for gas

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LONDON: The head of the company set to drill Britain’s first fracking well in a decade shrugs off the risk that protesters and government’s main opposition will shut down his project before it can start.

Francis Egan, the chief executive officer of Cuadrilla Resources Ltd, is poised to begin hydraulic fracturing within days at a well in northwest England.

No matter what’s decided by courts or politician­s weighing the issues, Egan said the UK’s growing needs for natural gas will remain a prominent factor in the debate.

While the ruling Conservati­ve Party has backed fracking, the Labour opposition said it will ban it if it takes power.

And Labour’s ascent is increasing­ly possible given the fragile majority the government is maintainin­g ahead of knife-edge votes planned on Britain’s plan to leave the European Union.

“Brexit or no Brexit, having reasonable homegrown production of your energy is a good thing,” Egan said. “Government­s come and government­s go.

But energy demand isn’t going anywhere and gas supply is continuing to decrease. Fundamenta­lly it will be a political choice whether you want to source your gas from Lancashire or Russia.”

The UK shale industry was stopped in its tracks in 2011 after fracking by Cuadrilla caused minor earthquake­s at its northwest England site.

The drilling is a magnet for angry protests amid claims that it will irreparabl­y harm the environmen­t and keep the nation wedded to polluting fossil fuels. Proponents say that Britain’s untapped shale gas reserves could make the country’s domestic energy supply secure for years to come.

“What’s often either forgotten or deliberate­ly sidelined is that we will be using gas,” Egan said. “There is no scenario that any credible energy forecaster that says we won’t be using gas for many decades to come.”

Cuadrilla has permission to drill and frack four wells at its Lancashire site. It will begin fracking the first of two horizontal shale gas exploratio­n wells by Friday at the earliest. The company will then take three months to extract the first flow of gas before testing its viability. It’s unlikely the site will be commercial­ly productive until 2021, Egan said.

Fracking involves pumping fluid and sand-like particles into wells under high pressure that breaks apart undergroun­d rock formations freeing petroleum deposits trapped in difficult to reach reservoirs. There have been aspiration­s for the UK to emulate the US shale boom but the industry remains small and unproducti­ve.

It’s one of the few technologi­es that could slow or even reverse the sharp declines in oil and gas production from the North Sea as convention­al deposits are pumped dry. Britain prospered in the 1980s and 1990s with wealth tapped by the oil industry, but income has shrunk since production peaked.

Natural gas is also in demand. Britain has been working to limit fossil fuel emissions to rein in climate change, re-positionin­g its energy sources away from coal plants and toward cleaner sources such as gas, which currently makes up about 42% of the country’s energy mix.

”It is a fossil fuel but it has the lowest emissions of fossil fuels and our view is it would be better to develop this here where you can regulate and control it than just close your eyes and pretend nothing is happening as you ship it across Europe from Russia,” Egan said.

Protesters are still making themselves heard, permanentl­y stationed outside the Lancashire site where three men were arrested and later jailed for as long as 16 months for public nuisance offenses.

Lawmakers aren’t backing off either – Labour energy spokeswoma­n Rebecca Long-Bailey has pledged to ban fracking should her party win an election. There’s disquiet about the practice in the Conservati­ve ranks over plans to streamline the applicatio­n process.

In a last gasp attempt to block Cuadrilla from fracking, a protester filed for an injunction at the UK High Court. Cuadrilla can’t do a thing until a judge decides on Thursday whether the legal challenge has any merit.

“The judicial system is clearly functionin­g well in the UK and there is no shortage of avenues for people to take their grievances to a court,” Egan said.

“We haven’t quite got to the European court yet but who knows.”

What’s often either forgotten or deliberate­ly sidelined is that we will be using gas. Francis Egan

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