Conservatives the Only Political Party Still Rooting for Fracking

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The Conservatives have been left the only major political party in the UK to back fracking, after Labourย on Mondayย announced it would introduce a ban if it wins the next generalย election.

Shadow energy and climate secretary, Barry Gardiner, told the Labour party conference on 26 September that the party has strengthened its previous policy on fracking: aย moratorium until environmental conditions areย met.

Gardiner told delegates: โ€œToday I am announcing that the next Labour government will ban fracking in the UK.

โ€œFracking locks us into an energy infrastructure that is based on fossil fuels long after our country needs to have moved toย renewables.

โ€œThe next Labour government will back the clean technologies of theย future.โ€

Labour will consult with industry and the Trade Unions about the best way to transition our energy industry, he said, to create the โ€œvital jobs and apprenticeships we are going to need for the UKโ€™s low-carbonย future.โ€

The announcement comes the same week that the first shipment of shale gas fracked in the US is due to arrive on UK soil. The import of ethane by chemicals giant Ineos is due on Tuesday, 27 September to arrive in Scotland, where a motion to ban frackingย was passedย inย June.

The Scottish National Party abstained on the vote but the party had imposed a moratorium on shale gas extraction in Januaryย 2015.

The Liberal Democracts voted to ban Fracking in England and Wales at the Partyโ€™s spring conference in March and helped to vote through the ban in Scotland. The Greens haveย for three yearsย been outright opposed to fracking and Plaid Cymru has backed the moratorium on fracking in Wales sinceย last year.

Even Diane James, the new leader of UKIP, which has traditionallyย courted climate science denial and promoted fracking, seems to be taking a cautious stance on fracking. Ahead of being named party leader she stated: โ€œMy personal view which might not become UKIP policy under any review is that I am against fracking until I see a comprehensive justification for it and the environmental risks have been properlyย understood.โ€

Questionsย Raised

Within a fortnight of Labourโ€™s announcement, central government is due to decide whether to accept Cuadrillaโ€™s appeal against Lancashire County Councilโ€™s decision last year to refuse its application for two frackingย sites.

The policy move from Labour raises questions about what the party would do with gas potentially already being fracked in the UK should it beย elected to government in theย future.

Shale gas has been touted as a โ€˜bridge fuelโ€™ to replace coal in the short term, before it too is phased out in the 2020s and 2030s to prevent global temperatures from running over the 2ยฐCย threshold.

Another shale company, Third Energy, is also waiting to hear whether it will be allowed to drill in the UK after Friends of the Earth and a local anti-fracking group, Frack Free Ryedale (FFR), launched a legal challenge to North Yorkshire County Councilโ€™s decision to give fracking the green light inย May.

Welcoming Labour’s news, Peter Allen of FFR today said in statement: โ€œWe are pleased to see that mainstream political opinion is now aligning itself with the views of the Great British public, who are overwhelmingly opposed toย fracking.

โ€œPro-fracking councillors will now be wondering if they can hang on to their seats in next year’s council elections, particularly in areas threatened byย fracking.โ€

Photo: Ron F viaย Flickr

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Victoria Seabrook writes about climate change, the criminal justice system, and social justice. She is news editor at independent local newspaper Hackney Citizen and co-editor of Prison Watch UK.

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