30 August, Friday, 2024
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HomeBusinessBritain's frackers have been treated horribly, but their time has come and...

Britain’s frackers have been treated horribly, but their time has come and gone

The industry will be rendered uncompetitive before it ever produces gas at scale

The International Energy Agency (IEA) has demolished the commercial case for fracking in the UK with unanswerable finality. Rishi Sunak is right to put an end to that romantic legacy of the culture wars, even if his stated motive is to cleave to the Tory manifesto.

One can only admire the wildcat shale frackers of the Marcellus and Permian Basin in the US. They have slashed CO2 emissions by displacing coal.

They have turned the US from struggling energy importer into the world’s oil and gas hegemon in just 15 years, transforming the geopolitical balance of power in favour of the liberal democracies. They have rescued Europe from its existential dependency on Russian gas. It is only because of them that Ukraine can be saved, and therefore that the EU can itself be saved as a viable project. Some gratitude might be in order.

But Lancashire is not West Texas. The rule of thumb for fracking in the UK is that extraction costs are twice as high. Breakneck advances in green technology are in any case changing the energy price hierarchy beyond recognition. The time for fracking in Britain’s Bowland shale field has come and gone. 

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