Anti-fracking
protesters Preston, Britain © Andrew Yates / Reuters
|
At least three man-made
earthquakes occur in Britain every year according to a new study, which may
prove fracking causes tremors. The study, carried out by Researching Fracking in
Europe (ReFine), found a sharp decline in the number of earthquakes since the
1980s when the coal industry was dismantled. Over 40 earthquakes linked to
human activities were reported in 1991, but as the deep coal mines closed the
number of tremors fell by 95 percent.
Published
in the journal Marine and Petroleum Geology on Wednesday, the study estimates
there have been at least three earthquakes per year of magnitude 1.5 or above
in Britain since 2000 caused by human activity such as mining, industrial
explosions and geothermal energy.
These
include two quakes caused by fracking in Lancashire in 2011 before a temporary
ban was imposed on the practice.
RT
report continues:
Researchers
from Newcastle, Durham and Keele universities analyzed 8,000 seismic events
between 1970 and 2012 across Britain.
They
found that around 21 percent were caused by human activity.
Lead
researcher Professor Richard Davies of Newcastle University warns that fracking
could increase seismic activity.
“Earthquakes
triggered or induced by humans are not a new concept for us here in the UK, but
earthquakes related to fracking are,” Davies said.
“Understanding
what the current situation is and setting a national baseline is imperative,
otherwise how can we say with any confidence in the future what the impact of
fracking has been nationwide?”
Davies
said the national baseline, along with seismic monitoring at fracking sites,
could show the impact of shale gas exploration on numbers of earthquakes.
“If
widespread exploitation of the UK’s shale reservoirs is granted and numbers
consistently rise then, in conjunction with local monitoring data, we should be
able to confidently demonstrate a causal link.”
“Historically,
fracking-related earthquakes have been small, but the UK is crisscrossed with
faults – some of which may be critically stressed – and if triggered these
could result in earthquakes that people can feel.”
The
Department of Energy and Climate Change said it has robust controls in place to
“mitigate seismic risks.”
“As
recognized by this research, there are no documented cases of shale gas
operations causing subsidence or earthquakes which have caused damage at the
surface,” the department’s spokesperson said.
“We have extremely robust
controls in place to mitigate seismic risks and in the unlikely event that any
operations were to pose a risk, we have the powers required to close them down,”
the person added.
No comments:
Post a Comment