MPs and onshore gas industry calls for immediate end to fracking ban - Mid Sussex readers have their say

Mid Sussex Times readers have given their thoughts on calls from Members of Parliament and the onshore gas industry to put an immediate end to the ban on fracking.

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MPs and the onshore gas industry met on Tuesday to call an end to the fracking moratorium that has hit domestic energy security as the UK’s gas import dependency skyrockets.

The meeting threw into the spotlight the 50 year supply of natural gas, valued at £6.6 trillion at current prices.

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With the potential to pour millions of pounds and tens of thousands of jobs into communities across northern and central England, and security from the supply and price squeezes of the European gas market as Russia severs international ties, MPs and the onshore gas industry asked the Government to lift the ban on fracking for shale gas immediately.

Green Party MP Caroline Lucas speaking at a fracking protest in Balcombe in 2013. Picture by Victoria ThompsonGreen Party MP Caroline Lucas speaking at a fracking protest in Balcombe in 2013. Picture by Victoria Thompson
Green Party MP Caroline Lucas speaking at a fracking protest in Balcombe in 2013. Picture by Victoria Thompson

Steve Baker, the Conservative MP for Wycombe, said: “As preparations are made for cement trucks to fill in the UK’s last functioning shale gas wells, it is obscene that Russia's war crimes are being funded by Europe's addiction to their gas.

“It's already too late to solve this winter's crisis but Boris won't be forgiven for allowing energy insecurity and high prices to carry on year after year. We cannot allow our pensioners and the most vulnerable in our society to suffer from energy crises every year. We cannot allow industrial collapse under the weight of intolerable energy prices.

“Under the Government's plans, we will need vast quantities of gas even as renewables are ramped up. Ministers who are resistant must realise that Putin has created a new reality compared to 2019. This new reality must spur us into immediate action. Morally, it is the right thing to do."

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Charles McAllister, policy manager at UK Onshore Oil and Gas, added: “A failure to develop UK shale gas could readily see the UK send £1 trillion overseas to exporters of natural gas over the next 28 years, a hard pill to swallow for the UK's communities as we jump from the Covid-19 crisis straight into one rooted in the cost of living.

“The environmental arguments don’t stand up, and neither do the claims around emissions: UK shale gas is forecast to have a carbon intensity one quarter of that of the liquefied natural gas (LNG) the UK is increasingly shipping in from Russia, Qatar and the USA. Economically, the LNG imports from these three countries meant the UK forking over an eye-watering £64bn from 2010-2021, the equivalent of £15 per household per month.

“The industry stands ready to get to work again creating a reliable domestic supply of much-needed natural gas. We don’t want or need subsidy; we merely need Government to open their eyes to the strong case for UK shale gas development and drop this illogical moratorium.”

A statement from environmental conservation organisation Frack Free Sussex said: “We are shocked that conversations are taking place to remove the fracking moratorium but much money has exchanged hands between the fossil fuel industry and our governments.

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“When this moratorium was put in place, it did not mean the fracking companies stopped lobbying our government.

“We think it atrocious that the industry and climate change deniers will use the current situation as a way to try and kickstart this dangerous method of trying to extract oil and gas.

“Our government must stick with the current moratorium. Fracking is unsafe and it will never be proved otherwise.

“To consider expanding the oil and gas industry at a time of irrevocable climate and ecological disaster would be, as UN leader Antonio Gueterres said, a criminal abdication of leadership. Fracking was banned because it poisons the air and water and produces dangerous greenhouse gasses.

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“The war in Ukraine highlights the urgent need for a renewable energy revolution in Britain and throughout Europe so that we are no longer reliant on Russian oil and gas.

“The science is very clear that fossil fuel extraction is causing the death of our only life support system and if we don’t rapidly move away from fossil fuels millions more will die, as well as the mass extinction of species and the death of entire ecosystems.”

Exploratory drilling near Wisborough Green and Fernhurst, near Haslemere, was refused in 2014 and 2015 respectively.

Exploratory drilling, not fracking, began near Billingshurst in 2017, but work is on hold while the data at the site in Horse Hill, near Horley, is assessed. Work remains ongoing at the Horse Hill site dubbed the 'Gatwick gusher'.

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Further testing for oil at Balcombe was blocked on March 2 but Angus Energy, an independent onshore oil and gas development company focused on advancing its portfolio of licensed UK assets, are appealing the decision.

We asked Mid Sussex Times readers on our Facebook page what they thought of calls to end the fracking ban. Here’s how they responded:

Carla Eliza: Fracking is not the answer. Ever.

Amanda Michaels: Going to have to over the course of this year to increase our supplies and we do have enough so there is NO need to panic buy. We also have a great deal of green energy being developed & already here as well. I absolutely agree with Russian oil & gas & their products being stopped!

June Seale: Fracking ban came about after it was proven that it damages the environment, increases air pollution, contaminates drinking supplies and potentially can cause seismic activity. Nothing has changed. Fracking is most definitely not the answer.

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John Hebditch: What we need is a combination of nuclear and more wind power. Tidal power and much better insulation of our homes.

Greg Mountain: There never has or will be any case for fracking. The position has not changed in the last seven years. It is uneconomic and environmentally unsound. It is not a short term solution to anything. The world has changed and people should understand reality. Cheap and abundant fossil energy is a thing of the past.

Xoán-Carlos León: Given how inept our water companies are I’d be very worried about contamination of water supplies if there was any fracking in the south east.

Patrick N Horsford: End the ban

Graeme Gadsdon: Use our own resources

Dave Emsley: When individuals are going to be unable to heat their homes, drive to work and the cost of food and other essentials will also increase massively every option must be on the table. There is no ideal option but we are not yet ready to make a complete switch to green tech, much as I wish we were.

Kevin Lawrence: Unacceptable. Invest in solar and wind.

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Mike Mundy: We have an almost inexhaustible supply of gas under our feet, yet we import fracked gas from USA. Crazy.

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