Fracking at the UK’s only active shale gas site has been suspended after the largest earthquake since the process started in October.
The tremor with a magnitude of 1.5 was measured by the British Geological Survey at Cuadrilla’s fracking site near Blackpool, Lancashire, earlier.
The previous largest quake at the site in Little Plumpton was 1.1.
Cuadrilla said fracking had stopped but according to research the impact would have been “like dropping a melon”.
‘Loud bang’
A 1.5 tremor – known as a “red” event under the government’s traffic light system in place for monitoring seismic events during fracking – results in a temporary halt to operations.
Any tremor measuring 0.5 or above means fracking must be temporarily stopped while tests are carried out.
Cuadrilla said it happened at about 11:20 GMT and followed a series of nine other seismic events at the Preston New Road site during Tuesday morning.
The energy firm said it would pause and monitor micro seismicity for the next 18 hours in line with regulations, adding the integrity of the well had been “checked and verified”.
Cath Middleton, who lives 1.6 miles from the site, said her house shook and she heard a “very loud bang”.
“To compare this to dropping a melon is ridiculous. My neighbour’s chair shook.”
What is fracking?
- Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, is a technique to extract gas and oil from the earth
- Liquid is pumped underground at high pressure to fracture shale rock and release gas or oil within
- Applications have also been submitted by various firms in Yorkshire, Nottinghamshire and for a second site in Lancashire
- The Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy says shale gas “has the potential to be a new domestic energy source”
A Friends of the Earth campaigner called for an end to fracking which he claimed poses risks to the climate and environment.
He said: “Within a day of Cuadrilla re-starting fracking in Lancashire there has already been another earthquake.
“Instead of acknowledging fracking needs to end, Cuadrilla are instead urging for regulations around earthquakes to be relaxed.”
A report commissioned by the government by Dr Ben Edwards of the University of Liverpool last month compared earthquake magnitudes caused by fracking with everyday events, such as bouncing a football and dropping a melon.
Little Plumpton is the first UK shale fracking site since the process was halted in 2011 when it was linked with earthquakes.
Credit BBC
Addendum: since December 10th to today there have been 11 tremors recorded. In total there have been 47 minor earthquakes since mid-October.
See also:
https://www.otsnews.co.uk/fracking-ceased-blackpool/
https://www.otsnews.co.uk/blackpool-fracking-earthquakes-not/
Fracking can create drinking water contamination, meaning that toxic chemicals may reach human lips in a worst-case scenario. This may not, however, occur overnight yet may transmogrify into a long-term problem for future generations.
Seemingly trivial microearthquakes are typically much too small to be apparent to the population, even when they are very close to fracking activity. Nevertheless, the stress changes and the changes in groundwater pressure and circulation can enable new movements on pre-existing, ancient, faults with the generation of greater seismic events.
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