A new
scientific study has found that fracking causes unpredictable earth tremors.
The government has responded by prohibiting the technique forthwith.
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A fracking site in the US |
The UK will impose a moratorium on fracking, effective immediately, following the publication of a damning scientific study on Saturday.
The
country's oil and gas industry has been pushing for the extraction of shale gas
through the controversial technique.
Read more:
Germany largely bans fracking
A new
report by the Oil and Gas Authority (OGA) warned the technique had a
dangerously high risk of causing disruption to local communities through earth
tremors of unpredictably high magnitude. The government announced on Saturday
it would therefore issue a complete ban on the procedure.
The
decision was welcomed by environmental activists, who have long opposed the
process, which involves extracting gas from rocks by breaking them up with
water and chemicals at high pressure. Activists oppose the technique for its
disastrous effects on water supplies, pollution, triggering of tremors and its
effect on the climate.
Change of
heart
Prime
Minister Boris Johnson and his government had previously supported the
industry, which was seen as a way to reduce imports of natural gas.
The news
comes as Johnson prepares for an election on December 12, that is being
dominated by Brexit, but with environmental issues also hovering over the vote.
The
business and energy department released a statement saying: "Exploratory
work to determine whether shale could be a new domestic energy source in the UK
... has now been paused — unless and until further evidence is provided that it
can be carried out safely here."
Blackpool
tremor
The
fracking ban comes after a report on an incident at a site managed by British
energy company Cuadrilla near Blackpool, in the north-west of England, where a
2.9-magnitude tremor shook houses earlier this year.
The incident
was subsequently examined by the OGA, which regulates Britain's oil and gas
industry, and the government have concluded the technique should be forbidden
forthwith.
"After
reviewing the OGA’s report into recent seismic activity ... it is clear that we
cannot rule out future unacceptable impacts on the local community,"
Business Secretary Andrea Leadsom said.
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