Fracking – Britain’s Next Revolution
Global Research, August 20,
2013
Water, water everywhere,
Nor any drop to drink.’
Samuel Taylor Coleridge: The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
At
long last Britain is discussing and objecting to fracking – or we would be if
the general public had access to accurate information. As it is, Prime Minister
David Cameron is going all out to promote a country-wide embrace of shale
gas.
Forgotten
is his promise to lead the ‘greenest
government ever’. Forgotten is the fact that shale gas is yet
one more fossil fuel that increases the risks from climate change; that methane
is far worse than most carbon emissions where global warming is concerned. No,
no. Instead he invites us to gaze on the Nirvana of cheap energy, energy that
will allow the poor to heat their homes – presumably while they also try to cope
with rising food prices, stop their homes from being flooded because of extreme
weather events or, if they are ill or elderly, dying during ever-increasing heat
waves.
He claims it
will ‘drive energy bills down’; provide jobs; bring money to local
neighbourhoods. He doesn’t give this last claim its accurate and truthful label
– bribery. In order to persuade people to allow fracking in their community the
energy companies have government permission to give communities £100,000 for
each exploratory well plus
1% of all their profits from the fracked site, not that the ‘profits’ will be
that much compared to costs, or last very long.
Because
the shale containing the gas is fractured, after an initial burst of gas being
captured and brought to the surface, a great deal of it simply leaks sideways
through the fractures. Some studies show that a well’s output can drop by
60% within a year, and by as much as 90% within 5 years of coming into
production, requiring the well to be ‘restimulated’. How sexy. Why don’t they
get honest and call it re-fracturing? If that fails to improve the production
then another well – or two – can be drilled. In other words, fracking never
involves single wells.
Nor
is it that profitable. As this report from
a group of New York state businesses says, “Studies funded by the natural gas
industry have exaggerated benefits and ignored significant costs”. Fracking is
really not doing as well as Cameron implies. It is not the great economic boom
he is asking us to grasp with both hands. Beware nettles, say I. The government
is also bribing the energy companies by offering them large tax
breaks for which, ultimately, the tax payer will pick up the
bill.
Cameron
says it takes ‘courage’ to go ahead with drilling for shale gas. No. It takes
bare-faced cheek for a politician to attempt to con the public quite this much.
It takes genuine courage to study and accept the plethora of evidence that is
available from countries that have firsthand experience of the frightening
effects of the fracking process, evidence that demonstrates why no country
should go ahead with fracking.
He
and his ministers are only interested in three things: the promise of cheap
energy might buy votes at the next general election; the money they will make
themselves (around a third of government ministers have links with energy and
finance); and taking the country down the fracking path will allow them to
ignore climate change, which they really do not have the courage to do anything
effective about. But this being a government of rich
men, mostly of the ‘their loss, our gain’ variety, fracking is
about money, and when Cameron speaks about shale gas one can almost see the
pound signs revolving in his eyes.
Pity
the uninformed British people who are being swept down this road by Cameron’s
evangelistic and very misleading fervour. Let’s put things into perspective. The
largest US shale gas field, the Barnett Shale in Texas, is around 5,000 square
miles. England, where almost all of the UK fracking (if allowed) would take
place, is 50,600 square miles, no more than 11 times larger than the Barnett
Shale, which already has over 16,000 wells. And England is very small, crowded
and home to some 53.5 million people.
The
real issue which is not being discussed in public, let alone addressed, is water
or rather, one aspect of it. Cameron says that “international evidence shows
there is no reason why the process should cause contamination of water supplies
and other environmental damage if properly regulated” (my emphasis).
But internationally, energy companies have shown little regard for regulations
or the environment, and certainly not where profits are concerned. And proper
inspection and enforcement of the regulations will cost money that we have not
got, and would not spend if we had.
Despite
the denials from supporters of fracking that the process can contaminate
underground water supplies, there is plenty of evidence that it happens. A
recently released study by
Texas University found heavy metals such as arsenic, selenium and strontium. One
of the report’s authors Brian Fontenot, said, “that any time you have water
wells that exceed the maximum contaminate limit for any of these heavy metals,
they are within about three kilometers of a natural gas well”. An Australian
study echoed findings from the US, with details of farmers’ water supplies being
unusable and farm stock dying from drinking contaminated water.