Thursday, December 11, 2025
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
Environmental Magazine
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
  • Climate Change
  • Energy
  • Recycling
  • Air
  • Fossil Fuels
  • Water
No Result
View All Result
Environmental Magazine
  • Home
  • News
  • Climate Change
  • Energy
  • Recycling
  • Air
  • Fossil Fuels
  • Water
No Result
View All Result
Environmental Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Observers respond to Labour’s fracking announcement

October 1, 2025
in News
A A

Energy secretary Ed Milliband has announced plans to bring forward legislation that will raise political and procedural barriers against any resumption of fracking, one of the clearly signalled policy priorities of Reform UK.

He told attendees at the Labour Party Conference on 1 October: “Fracking will not take a penny off bills. It will not create long-term sustainable jobs. It will trash our climate commitments. And it is dangerous and deeply harmful to our natural environment.”

The legislation, which he said will be put forward as part of the North Sea transition plan due to be published this autumn, would mean future governments would have to repeal such a ban by an act of Parliament, if they wanted to resume the practice.

Shale gas extraction requires drilling using a high-pressure mixture of water, sand and chemicals, and has been linked to earthquakes in the UK.

A moratorium on the practice was imposed in 2019 by Boris Johnson’s government, following the recording of tremors linked to Cuadrilla’s Preston New Road site in Lancashire. It was briefly lifted in September 2022 by Liz Truss’s administration but no new fracking took place, and the ban was soon re-imposed when Sunak took over.

Responding to Milliband’s latest comments, Shahzad Ansari, Professor of Strategy and Innovation at Cambridge Judge Business School, who has co-authored a study on the historical fracking debate in Europe, suggested such a move follows a pattern established in France, which declared a ban in 2011, and Germany, which has followed a ‘restrict-and-study’ stance with test wells allowed, but commercial rollout stalled.

“Our study of fracking in France and Germany shows that these choices are shaped less by geology and economic returns than by national history, institutions and public mobilisation – and such public pressures are now very visible in Britain.”

Other commentators appeared eager to offer a fuller itemisation of the political pressures at work, including the fact of the UK’s currently having the most expensive industrial energy in the developed world, and among the highest domestic energy prices. Andy Mayer, Energy Analyst at the free market think tank the Institute of Economic Affairs, observed: “The UK is a net importer of oil and gas and will continue to use these resources for energy for many decades to come.”

“Banning the extraction of our own reserves or techniques like fracking doesn’t change that; it just makes their consumption more expensive and polluting.

He suggested Milliband’s pledges to deliver more affordable energy amounted to “sleight of hand”, and “moving policy costs from bills to taxes.”

ShareTweetSharePinSendShare

Related Articles

News

Autonomous drifting robot survives under East Antarctic ice shelf to take first-of-its-kind measurements

December 11, 2025
News

US highway trial demonstrates wireless charging of electric HGVs moving at speed

December 8, 2025
News

Glass sector launches a unified sustainability framework

December 4, 2025
News

Project uses heavy-lift drones to seed trees in upland areas in the Scottish Borders

December 4, 2025
News

UK project sets out the world’s first roadmap to a circular space economy

December 3, 2025
News

Government announces strengthened Environmental Improvement Plan

December 2, 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

New Report Marks a Decade of Progress, Challenges on Global Decarbonization

October 6, 2025

Wyoming, Slow To Take Federal Clean Energy Funds, Gambles State Money on Carbon Sequestration and Hydrogen Schemes to Keep Fossil Fuels Flowing

February 9, 2024

Don't miss it

Water

Study shows promise for acid mine drainage recycling

December 11, 2025
Energy

How Batteries Could Play a Role in Data Center Rollouts

December 11, 2025
Energy

ERCOT’s Market is Transitioning Toward Storage and Solar

December 10, 2025
Fossil Fuels

A New Report Describes Deep Environmental Cuts, State by State

December 10, 2025
Fossil Fuels

Latest Twist in Chevron’s Amazon Pollution Saga: Ecuador Ordered to Pay the Oil Company $220 Million

December 10, 2025
Activism

Greenpeace Scrutinizes the Environmental Record of the Company That Sued the Group

December 10, 2025
Environmental Magazine

Environmental Magazine, Latest News, Opinions, Analysis Environmental Magazine. Follow us for more news about Enviroment and climate change from all around the world.

Learn more

Sections

  • Activism
  • Air
  • Climate Change
  • Energy
  • Fossil Fuels
  • News
  • Uncategorized
  • Water

Topics

Activism Air Climate Change Energy Fossil Fuels News Uncategorized Water

Recent News

Study shows promise for acid mine drainage recycling

December 11, 2025

How Batteries Could Play a Role in Data Center Rollouts

December 11, 2025

© 2023 Environmental Magazine. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Climate Change
  • Energy
  • Recycling
  • Air
  • Fossil Fuels
  • Water

© 2023 Environmental Magazine. All rights reserved.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.