Thank god the banking sector was heavily regulated!
It was indeed. By experts in closing doors and looking at the rears of horses.
Thank god the banking sector was heavily regulated!
yes cos we regulate things so well :roll eyes: who's going to inspect these parasitic earth killing companies? Environment agency has been cut to nothing
keep drinking the Kool Aid
They were fracking wells as shallow as 60' in some areas of the US. Won't happen in the UK.Ground water contamination tends to come from poor well completions rather than the process of fracking - in the US it's the usual case of poor regulation and any old joe jumping on the bandwagon.
Highly unlikely to ever happen here considering the existing regulation with respect to wells/well completion from the north sea.
And so it starts:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-35107203
Fracking under national parks is backed by MPs.
I'm thoroughly against fracking and i'm interested to see how this will affect the parks, not only through the fracking development and processing but through the traffic caused by workers and general logistics.
Ground water contamination tends to come from poor well completions rather than the process of fracking - in the US it's the usual case of poor regulation and any old joe jumping on the bandwagon.
Highly unlikely to ever happen here considering the existing regulation with respect to wells/well completion from the north sea.
I've done it an hour. An hour in a day is nothing. Just up the road silly.
Was it?
But nice try with the strawman.
yes cos we regulate things so well :roll eyes: who's going to inspect these parasitic earth killing companies? Environment agency has been cut to nothing
keep drinking the Kool Aid
They were fracking wells as shallow as 60' in some areas of the US. Won't happen in the UK.
Fracking has been carried out in the UK since the 70s without problems.
About time we moved forward on this.
Waiting for the first use of "Frack Through The Letterbox"
British Columbia's energy regulator has confirmed that a 4.6 magnitude earthquake in northeast British Columbia in August was caused by fracking and is likely to be the largest fracking-induced seismic event ever recorded.
The earthquake struck on August 17, 2015 about 110 kilometers northwest of Fort St. John in British Columbia. Its epicenter was close to a fracking site operated by Progress Energy Canada Ltd. Workers at the drill site reported their pick-up trucks shook and power poles swayed by the quake prompting the natural gas production company to temporarily halt operations.
British Columbia Oil and Gas Commission, which regulates the fracking industry, had launched an investigation into the cause of the quake. It released a report last week stating that the 4.6-magnitude earthquake was caused by fluid injection during hydraulic fracturing from an operator in the area.
Progress Energy Canada Ltd., followed regulations and stopped operations as soon as the magnitude was known.We allowed them to continue operations with a reduced pump rate, but if another event were to occur of 3.5 or greater, you have to shut in again and we’ll try something different.
Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/news/...used-by-fracking/article/452682#ixzz3w9bMFKzV
It was indeed. By experts in closing doors and looking at the rears of horses.
There is a massive police operation (helicopters, lines of police vans, road closures) current in progress not far from Chester Zoo as it appears the Baliffs are evicting the anti-fracking protesters at one of the suggested test drilling sites.
Can't believe the expense of this police operation is worth it. With global prices of oil/gas so low its not economical to drill there surely.![]()
There is a massive police operation (helicopters, lines of police vans, road closures) current in progress not far from Chester Zoo as it appears the police are evicting the anti-fracking protesters at one of the suggested test drilling sites.
Can't believe the expense of this police operation is worth it. With global prices of oil/gas so low its not economical to drill there surely.![]()