The Herald

National parks ‘not suited to fracking’, says report

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MOST of the UK’s national parks – including the two in Scotland – are unsuitable for fracking because of their geology, a report has found.

Scientists from Durham University’s Department of Earth Sciences have reviewed existing data for each of our 15 national parks and found only four where it could be considered.

They found the four parks with geology to interest companies looking to exploit shale gas, shale oil or coalbed methane were the North York Moors, the Peak District, the South Downs and the Yorkshire Dales.

Fracking was considered “unlikely” in the Brecon Beacons, Exmoor, New Forest and Northumber­land. They have shales or coals present but other aspects of their geology make fracking unfavourab­le.

The remaining seven national parks – the Broads, Cairngorms, Dartmoor, Lake District, Loch Lomond and the Trossachs, Pembrokesh­ire Coast and Snowdonia – have geology which rules out fracking, the report found.

Those behind the study said they produced the report as, they claimed, there remained uncertaint­y about the policy on fracking in national parks.

Dr Liam Herringsha­w, of Durham University’s Department of Earth Sciences, said: “Some national parks have no shales or coal within them or adjacent to them. Others do, but their nature means that they are unlikely to yield economic quantities of oil or gas.

“We hope that this review will help provide all sides involved in the fracking debate with some clarity about the potential for fracking in these areas, which currently appears to be lacking.”

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