Think of going
the wrong way up a one way street and multiply the feeling by a hundred for the
moment you realise you are approaching a dual carriageway on the wrong slip
road. See the ‘wrong way’ sign and feel the fear. Now think fracking.
Fracking the
earth for shale gas is the ‘Wrong Way’. The implications of fracking for the
future of the planet are as frightening as approaching a motorway on the wrong
slip road, without the time or the means of turning back.
Fracking involves drilling at great depth,
vertically and then horizontally, for long distances (it is not a small local
operation) under the earth’s crust, causing it to crumble and disintegrate from
within. This is brought about by the use of toxic chemicals and enormous
quantities of water which, when combined, release methane and combine with
other chemicals to poison the water that comes out of the kitchen tap.
Residents of Butler County Pennsylvania, where extensive fracking is already
being employed, report not only sudden attacks of projectile vomiting,
headaches, strange rashes and the instantaneous death of a dog who had just
drunk from a nearby water source. They also report incidents of water emerging
from taps as fire.
We can only begin to guess at the long term possibly
irredeemable effect this activity may have on the fresh water we rely on for
drinking, agriculture and the ongoing sustainability of the planet as a whole,
not to mention our immediate surroundings were fracking to be employed in a
place nearby, as it was for the residents of Poulton-le-Fylde near Blackpool.
Added to this, is the internal and barely imaginable effect of smashing the
very substance of the earth, what holds it together from within and keeps its
relatively fragile surface intact.
The earthquakes and tsunamis we have seen in the
past couple of decades would bear no resemblance to the kind of whole scale and
pretty well permanent devastation which the internal fracturing of the earth
could bring about within a very short time scale. A British Geological Survey
linked the two minor earthquakes near Blackpool which occurred on April 1st
and May 27th 2011 to in depth fluid injection linked to the Preese
Hall shale gas drilling site. The epicentre of the May quake was within 500
metres of the site.
It is not good enough to vaguely hope that somehow
the scientists engaged in researching more viable ways of sustaining human life
without damaging what it most depends on, will find a solution and solve the
problem in time. Neither can we trust that governments and the leaders of
industry will see sense and that right thinking and preventive action will
somehow prevail. Christians, the institutional Church and all people of faith
need to act on this one before it is too late. Door to door petitions, lobbying
MPs, and any kind of peaceful intelligent protest are urgently needed.
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