4/11/13, "EU's chief science advisor gives shale gas go-ahead," EurActiv
"The EU’s chief scientific advisor has said that
evidence allows the go-ahead for extracting shale gas, the energy source
at the centre of a European policy tug-of-war.
The EU executive launched a green paper on 27 March, setting out Europe's energy and climate aims for 2030, with Energy Commissioner Günther Oettinger taking a favourable position on shale gas.
"I am in favour of producing shale gas, particularly for safety
reasons, and to reduce gas prices," he said. "In the United States,
which is a big producer of shale gas, the price of gas is four times
less than in Europe."
Shale gas has triggered an industrial revival in the United States,
which the International Energy Agency expects to become almost
self-sufficient in oil and gas by 2035.
But crippling production costs, exploration closures, and
government-level environmental concerns have seen the industry’s
expansion in Europe waver.
Climate Commissioner Connie Hedegaard has adopted a less favourable
tone on shale gas, believing its extraction in Europe bears little
comparison with the United States.
“We do not expect that it will be so easy in Europe: geological
conditions are different, and so are environmental rules and the
activity of soils,” she told reporters at the launch of the Commission
green paper last month.
But Anne Glover, the chief scientific adviser to Commission President
José Manuel Barroso, contradicted this view and gave a scientific green
light to shale.
Speaking at a debate on science and policy-making in Brussels on 9
April, she said: “As with all energy production, there will be risks
involved whether that is wind or coal power,” Glover told the audience
at the debate, organised by the European Policy Centre, a think tank.
“We should not go into a denial phase. From my point of view the
evidence will allow us to go ahead [with shale production]. But in terms
of extraction and production there are non-scientific issues to be
debated,” Glover said.
Europe 'in the denial phase'
António Fernando Correia de Campos, the Portuguese MEP who chairs the
Parliament’s science and technology options assessment panel, also
endorsed shale during the debate. Although he said he was not speaking
on behalf of any parliamentary group or committee, Correia de Campos
said Europe was “in the denial phase” on shale gas.
He said it was clear that within five years Europe would be importing
shale gas from the US because it cost a quarter to a fifth of current
European gas imports. “We are basing our opinion on the denial paradigm,
which is one step behind the precautionary principle,” Correia de
Campos said.
Member states remain divided on their approach to shale. Last
October, British Chancellor George Osborne announced potential tax
breaks for domestic shale. The same month Poland declared its push for
the gas, saying it would invest some €12.5 million to develop
exploration by 2020.
But large-scale production has proved difficult, with European
governments and major energy companies recently suspending or halting
exploration, and France has imposed a moratorium on shale gas drilling.
Meanwhile doubts remain amongst campaigners about the safety of shale extraction.
"Several peer-reviewed studies have shown that [extracion] operations
and production activities significantly increase the cancer risks for
communities living less than half a mile from drilling sites,” Antoine
Simon, extractive industries campaigner at Friends of the Earth Europe,
told EurActiv." via Tom Nelson
.
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