The Scotsman

Research says fracking isn’t apocalypti­c

As the Scottish Government consults on unconventi­onal oil and gas extraction, Sandy Telfer has the experts’ view

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The Scottish Government announced that there was to be a moratorium on granting consents for unconventi­onal oil and gas developmen­t in Scotland until further research and a public consultati­on was carried out in January 2015.

This announceme­nt was made six months after its own Independen­t Expert Scientific Panel had concluded that the technology exists to allow the safe extraction of the resource in Scotland subject to robust regulation being in place.

Further research was commission­ed and studies considered economic, public health and climate change impacts and the issues surroundin­g seismicity, transport and de-commission­ing. The reports were published last November and perhaps unsurprisi­ngly, given the view of the Panel, the overall conclusion drawn by the researcher­s is that, provided the planning and environmen­tal impact assessment process is properly implemente­d and best operationa­l practice is applied by operators against a strong seamless regulatory framework, significan­t adverse impacts on local communitie­s can be avoided.

Although there was a recognitio­n that there may be benefits for energy security and Scottish industry if new domestic sources of natural gas production became available, more tellingly, the economic impact report also highlighte­d the importance to Scotland’s large and well-establishe­d petro-chemical industry of being able to source ready supplies of feedstock in the form of natural gas liquids from a secure domestic supply.

Specific note was made of the fact that the 10 million tonnes of chemical products that are manufactur­ed annually at Ineos’ Grangemout­h plant are used as the building blocks for a wide range of everyday consumer goods. And of the fact, too, that in the US the developmen­t of shale gas has resulted in US feedstock products now being nearly half the price of that of identical European products.

For members of the public and their elected representa­tives who are concerned about the industrial­isation of the Scottish countrysid­e, if shale gas developmen­t were given the goahead, the findings of the “Economic Impact Assessment and Scenario Developmen­t” report prepared by KPMG should offer significan­t comfort. Taking their central scenario based on midpoint estimates of potential shale gas developmen­t in Scotland, the authors calculated that 20 [drilling] pads of 15 wells each would be built out over 11 years starting in 2023-2024, with each pad having an estimated 15-year production lifespan.

This apparently conservati­ve assumption on drilling pad numbers reflects the fact, as the KPMG report points out, that the developabl­e area of the Midland Valley is limited by factors such as urbanisati­on, faulting, water bodies, designated areas etc.

As pads are usually around the size of a football pitch (reducing to half that size once drilling is completed) and with a maximum of three pads being able to be constructe­d in any year, the concern expressed in some quarters that the Midland Valley of Scotland will come to resemble a Texan oilfield if shale gas developmen­t is allowed to proceed is somewhat fanciful.

The transport impacts research estimated that during the exploratio­n and appraisal phases a well pad would generate around 190 HGV movements per week for a period of approximat­ely two years. By way of comparison a warehouse distributi­on centre would be expected to generate around 5,000 two-way HGV movements over the same period.

So far as impact on house prices is concerned, the research found on the basis of existing studies that the evidence was inconclusi­ve. While some

research had indicated a fall in house prices ahead of drilling commencing, other studies found that in some areas of the US there had been significan­t increases in house prices in the area surroundin­g shale gas sites due to the demand for accommodat­ion.

The public consultati­on process has now started, with the release last month of the consultati­on document entitled, Talking Fracking – A Consultati­on on Unconventi­onal Oil and Gas. In announcing the start of the consultati­on, which is to run through to the end of May, the Scottish Government advised that it saw it as an opportunit­y for people to consider the evidence and present views on that evidence and the future of this industry in Scotland.

Once the consultati­on closes and the responses considered, the Scottish Government will again review the evidence and then put its recommenda­tion to a vote in the Scottish Parliament. A final decision on whether or not unconventi­onal oil and gas has a role in Scotland’s energy mix will then be made by the end of this year. Sandy Telfer is a Partner with DLA Piper

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 ??  ?? 0 Protesters reckon that fracking is dangerous and will destroy the countrysid­e – along with property prices
0 Protesters reckon that fracking is dangerous and will destroy the countrysid­e – along with property prices

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