Reversing Course, UK Opens National Parks to Fracking

Fracking will now be permitted in national parks, “areas of outstanding natural beauty,” and potentially near drinking water sources, members of the UK Parliament said Wednesday,  marking a reversal of course from the commitment it made just three weeks ago to pass a prohibition, and infuriating opponents of toxic drilling.

On January 26, the House of Commons agreed to an amendment banning toxic drilling in the aforementioned special areas. The prohibition—if implemented—would have halted drilling in 40 percent of England’s shale areas, according to a study by the Guardian.  But the new change allows for drilling in these areas as long as the drilling rigs themselves sit just outside of the areas. 

The ban had already been criticized as falling short of an all-out halt to fracking from grassroots organizations, as well as parliament’s own Environmental Audit Committee, which released a report in late January that warned the toxic drilling is not compatible with the country’s “efforts to keep global temperature rise below two degrees.”

But since committing to the prohibition, the government has backpedaled on this and other protections, prompting the accusation by Green Party MP Caroline Lucas that ministers are “doing the dirty work of fracking companies for them.”

As the Campaign to Protect Rural England notes, “It was hoped that the Government, at the insistence of MPs from across the House, would reinstate strong protections.”

However, statements made by energy and climate change minister Amber Rudd on Wednesday show that the Conservative government is not taking such a stand.

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