100 signatures reached
To: Hyndburn Council Leaders & Hyndburn MP
KEEP HYNDBURN FRACK FREE
SAY NO TO FRACKING
Make Hyndburn a Frack Free Zone.
Make Hyndburn a Frack Free Zone.
Why is this important?
Unconventional gas exploitation - "fracking" - is a ridiculous idea.
The Government's arguments used to justify fracking are as follows:
That it will create jobs, that it’ll bring down energy bills, that it’s good for our energy security and it's a transition fuel to a green energy economy.
1. That it will create jobs.
A Department for the Environment and Climate Change’s (DECC) report estimated a maximum of 24,300 of them. Yet 400,000 jobs could be created by 2020 by investment in the clean energy sector.
2. That it’ll bring down energy bills like it has in the US.
But the UK’s geology is more complex than in the US, which means that the process here will be uneconomic. Even if that wasn’t the case, unlike the US, the UK exports gas as part of a European gas market, and as fracking companies will sell to the highest bidder of these European countries, there could never be a guarantee that UK energy users would be the beneficiaries.
3. That it’s good for our energy security
A House of Commons Energy and Climate Change Committee recommendation was that shale gas should not be relied on to contribute to energy security. An energy security expert has said the best way to reduce energy security risks is to promote renewable power generation, improve energy efficiency and reduce overall energy demand.
4. A transition fuel to a green energy economy.
Department for Energy and Climate Change-commissioned report on fracking’s greenhouse gas emissions has been shown to be based on poor data and exaggeration. When the actual figures are factored-in, the report shows that burning shale gas to produce electricity is about as bad as, or very possibly even worse than burning coal!
The arguments against fracking are so numerous:
The UK’s geology is too complex for fracking to be safe or economic.
The UK’s geography means we don’t have America’s wide open spaces away from the population or agriculture.
Water contamination. The UN has listed seven different ways this can occur.
The huge quantities of water required.
The carcinogenic properties of the chemicals used.
Air pollution.
Earthquakes.
Industrialisation of countryside and loss of agricultural land to roads, well-pads, pipelines, compressor stations and so on.
Traffic/chemical spills/noise and light pollution.
Impact on tourism.
Even if none of the above applied this doesn’t discount the big one – climate change. A growing number of climate change scientists are recognising that to have any chance of us staying below the two degree increase in global temperature that is required to avoid catastrophic climate change, we have to leave 80% of all already discovered fossil fuels in the ground.
So why does this government want to find more of the stuff if we can’t burn it?
Not all governments are hell bent on fracking - far from it. There are bans or moratoriums on fracking in France, Germany, many American states, and at least twelve other countries worldwide.
And there are attractive alternatives, particularly for the UK as we have the best renewable energy resources in Europe. That’s where our energy security is - and the 400,000 jobs to get our economy back on track.
A policy of support for fracking is a vote-loser.
As elected representatives of Hyndburn we the community call on you to say no to fracking and yes to keeping Hyndburn frack free?
The Government's arguments used to justify fracking are as follows:
That it will create jobs, that it’ll bring down energy bills, that it’s good for our energy security and it's a transition fuel to a green energy economy.
1. That it will create jobs.
A Department for the Environment and Climate Change’s (DECC) report estimated a maximum of 24,300 of them. Yet 400,000 jobs could be created by 2020 by investment in the clean energy sector.
2. That it’ll bring down energy bills like it has in the US.
But the UK’s geology is more complex than in the US, which means that the process here will be uneconomic. Even if that wasn’t the case, unlike the US, the UK exports gas as part of a European gas market, and as fracking companies will sell to the highest bidder of these European countries, there could never be a guarantee that UK energy users would be the beneficiaries.
3. That it’s good for our energy security
A House of Commons Energy and Climate Change Committee recommendation was that shale gas should not be relied on to contribute to energy security. An energy security expert has said the best way to reduce energy security risks is to promote renewable power generation, improve energy efficiency and reduce overall energy demand.
4. A transition fuel to a green energy economy.
Department for Energy and Climate Change-commissioned report on fracking’s greenhouse gas emissions has been shown to be based on poor data and exaggeration. When the actual figures are factored-in, the report shows that burning shale gas to produce electricity is about as bad as, or very possibly even worse than burning coal!
The arguments against fracking are so numerous:
The UK’s geology is too complex for fracking to be safe or economic.
The UK’s geography means we don’t have America’s wide open spaces away from the population or agriculture.
Water contamination. The UN has listed seven different ways this can occur.
The huge quantities of water required.
The carcinogenic properties of the chemicals used.
Air pollution.
Earthquakes.
Industrialisation of countryside and loss of agricultural land to roads, well-pads, pipelines, compressor stations and so on.
Traffic/chemical spills/noise and light pollution.
Impact on tourism.
Even if none of the above applied this doesn’t discount the big one – climate change. A growing number of climate change scientists are recognising that to have any chance of us staying below the two degree increase in global temperature that is required to avoid catastrophic climate change, we have to leave 80% of all already discovered fossil fuels in the ground.
So why does this government want to find more of the stuff if we can’t burn it?
Not all governments are hell bent on fracking - far from it. There are bans or moratoriums on fracking in France, Germany, many American states, and at least twelve other countries worldwide.
And there are attractive alternatives, particularly for the UK as we have the best renewable energy resources in Europe. That’s where our energy security is - and the 400,000 jobs to get our economy back on track.
A policy of support for fracking is a vote-loser.
As elected representatives of Hyndburn we the community call on you to say no to fracking and yes to keeping Hyndburn frack free?