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Gas 'Fracking' Gets Green Light
Tue, 2012-04-17 22:36 — Kathy GilbeauxCuadrilla shale fracking facility in Lancashire. The controversial method of extracting gas has been given the green light by experts. Photograph: Matthew Lloyd/Getty
by Fiona Harvey - guardian.co.uk - April 16, 2012
Drilling method can be extended throughout UK, say experts, even though it has caused two earthquakes
Ministers have been advised to allow the controversial practice of fracking for shale gas to be extended in Britain, despite it causing two earthquakes and the emergence of serious doubts over the safety of the wells that have already been drilled.
The advice of the first official British government report into fracking, published on Tuesday, is all but certain to be accepted by ministers, with the result that thousands of new wells could be drilled across the UK.
The experts say hydraulic fracturing, whereby a well is drilled hundreds of metres deep and pumped full of water, sand and chemicals in order to release methane gas, should be allowed on a wide scale, although they accept that two small earthquakes in Blackpool last spring were caused by the first stages of fracking activities in the only British plants operating.
Preese Hall Shale Gas Fracturing: Review & Recommendations for Induced Seismic Mitigation (26 page .PDF file)
http://og.decc.gov.uk/assets/og/ep/onshore/5075-preese-hall-shale-gas-fracturing-review.pdf
UK - Department of Energy and Climate Change - Cuadrilla Geomechanical & DECC Report (and other supporting information)
http://og.decc.gov.uk/en/olgs/cms/explorationpro/onshore/cuadrilla_decc/cuadrilla_decc.aspx
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