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No evidence fracking, north sea extraction will have impact on price of gas, government adviser says

There is no evidence that if the UK maximised fracking and north sea extraction that it would have a meaningful impact on the international price of gas, a government adviser has said.

The UK “couldn’t possibly” produce enough gas from the North Sea and fracking together to shift the price “in any real way,” Lord Deben, Chairman of the independent Climate Change Committee which advises the government on tackling the climate crisis told The Independent.

In any case, he said, it presupposes that we can frack gas “commercially, sensibly in Britain” which has “so far has not been seen” and fundamentally doing so would not help tackle the cost of living crisis because the gas will be set at international prices.

“So it seems not a sensible thing to say ‘because gas prices are high we must use more gas’” he added.

His remarks come after Liz Truss’ new government announced an emergency energy package in a bid to bolster Britain’s energy security and tackle the gas price crisis, which included lifting the ban on fracking and expanding drilling for oil and gas in the North Sea.

Economies re-emerging after the coronavirus pandemic combined with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and its decision to severely limit supplies of natural gas to the continent have seen global gas prices spike in recent months.

Lord Deben said the answer to tackling the cost of living crisis was – as Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng has previously pointed out –  to “get as fast onto renewables as we possibly can” and to boost energy efficiency to cut demand.

“The two things are synonymous – fighting climate change and fighting the cost of living crisis are the same thing,” he said.

As for energy security, Lord Deben said Russia’s war in Ukraine meant the government is in a position where it is trying to protect its energy supplies in the short term at the same time as fighting climate change.

So far, he said, the government hadn’t done anything to undermine its commitments to tackling the climate crisis by reaching net zero but that he was watching “carefully.”

“If in fact it starts to say things which do undermine our battle for climate change, I’ll be the first to tell it,” he said.

His remarks come after the government’s former chief scientific adviser told The Independent last week that Liz Truss’ energy plans show the UK has effectively abandoned net-zero targets just three years after its world-leading commitment to cutting emissions.

The drive for more oil and gas production was “completely at odds” with the UK’s legally binding net-zero target, said Sir David King, head of theClimate Crisis Advisory Group, who was chief scientific adviser to the government between 2000 and 2007.

The Climate Change Committee has advised that the extraction of oil and gas from the North Sea and fracking can go ahead as long as certain conditions are met. In the case of the North Sea, the Committee has said it would support a tighter limit on oil and gas production, with stringent tests and a presumption against exploration, but that ultimately any new decision must be taken by ministers.

“You have to do it in the most environmentally friendly way,” said Lord Deben.

A tanker loads its cargo of liquefied natural gas in Russia in 2021. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and its decision to severely limit supplies of natural gas to the continent have seen global gas prices spike in recent months.

The problem with this is that Shell and other companies operating in the North Sea have failed to fully meet the environmental standards that the Committee has said have to be introduced, he added.

The Climate Change Committee has recommended that emissions from offshore fossil fuel production be reduced by 68 per cent from 2018 levels by 2030.

However, the North Sea Transition Deal between the government and the offshore oil and gas sector and the government’s Net Zero Strategy committed to a 50 per cent reduction in emissions – a target the committee has previously described as “insufficient”.

The bosses of Shell and BP among others have since refused to commit to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by 68 per cent in line with the recommendation of the watchdog.

Lord Deben, the Chairman of the Climate Change Committee.



Xural.com

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