Jun 29

 

ParisTech Review, an online English language magazine, has published the following addition to the French debate on shale gas extraction:

Thoughts on Unconventional Gas Development

“Are we entering a golden age of gas?” The question was posed in the latest IEA report and if the experts are to be believed the response is firmly positive. They have made predictions of a bright future based largely on the emergence of unconventional natural gas. The United States has witnessed a gold rush more commonly associated with the nation’s frontier past, one that is raising some serious concerns for the environment.

In the recently published report, the International Energy Agency (IEA) presented a scenario under which the global use of natural gas could rise 50% by 2035, at which point it would represent one quarter of global energy demand. The resource hungry emerging economies will play a significant role with demand in China expected to reach parity with the entire European Union by 2035 and India’s current demand multiplied four-fold.

What logic underpins these spectacular claims? Sheltered from the general opprobrium leveled at the oil and nuclear industries in the wake of the blowout at Deepwater Horizon and the disaster at Fukushima, natural gas has emerged as the energy sector’s unlikely poster child. Cleaner and more flexible than other hydrocarbons natural gas possesses a number of advantages that other technologies are finding hard to match.

Global natural gas resources are vast and widely distributed. In recent estimates the IEA has predicted supplies sufficient for the next 250 years at current levels of production. Across five continents the potential is there and in a statement made by Nobuo Tanaka, Executive Director at the IEA during the presentation of the aforementioned report he indicated that recent developments have shifted more attention to the increased role natural gas could play in the global energy mix. Indeed, he stated the potential for, “the global gas market to become more diversified, and therefore improve energy security.”

Unconventional gas, a key role in the expansion

Only a few years ago it was rare to hear such optimistic claims and it has been the rise of unconventional gas that has completely reshaped the playing field. Reserves have been estimated by the IEA to be at least as widespread as the conventional natural gas that currently accounts for 85% of world production. One of the primary sources is shale gas named for the non-porous rock in which it is found. Another is the so-called “tight gas” produced from reservoirs with low permeability, under extremely high pressure, and grouped in compact pockets throughout rock deposits. Less promising sources are coal bed gas found in seams underground or methane hydrates, buried in the sediment of the world’s oceans.

The existence of these resources buried just beneath the earth’s surface has been known for years but it is only recently that advances in exploration techniques intersected with rising energy prices to force them from the shadows. “The petroleum industry has known about unconventional gas for years but because of the available technology and the market conditions was unable to exploit the resource,” notes Jean-Michel Gauthier, Chair in Energy and Finance at HEC and Senior Partner in charge of Energy and Resources at Deloitte. “In the trade, some were heard to say [the market] would arrive ‘post-nuclear’ …”

Thinking underwent a radical shift over the course of the last decade and “suddenly, we began to witness significant levels of unconventional gas and were made aware of the vast potential represented by structures such as the Barnett Shales in Texas,” explains Gauthier. “Forecasters have completely changed their tune and are now making predictions that unconventional gas will represent at least 45% of production within the next few years.”

Shale gas, rising star

The exploitation of shale gas ignited a genuine revolution in the United States. In a country that only recently witnessed massive investment in terminal infrastructure to receive imports of liquefied natural gas the Americans now find themselves sitting on enormous reserves. Economist Jean-Marie Chevalier of the Centre of Geopolitics of Energy and Raw Materials (CGEMP) at University Paris-Dauphine notes, “The United States was viewed as a massive importer and now finds itself on the verge of becoming an exporter. Gas prices have been cut in half.”

With doubts over the potential of these new resources, large oil multinationals played a negligible role in the initial development of the sector. “Unconventional gas has arrived by way of small American firms,” admits Gauthier. He mentions that the North American petroleum industry presents a stark contrast to the European market and is populated by a multitude of small independent operators, particularly in Canada. “They are in many ways the ‘cowboys’ of the exploration, of which they are the masters, putting new techniques to the test.”

As possibilities have become clearer, there has been a rush of activity as other actors attempt to catch up. “Over the last two or three years shale gas has become a major component in the strategy of large multinationals,” confirms Gauthier. “The recent wave of mergers and acquisitions, the large transactions on the Oil & Gas market, are for the most part related to unconventional gas. Look at ExxonMobil on XTO or Total on Synenco and UTS Energy. Large groups are either signing joint ventures with small operators or buying them. Most of the current investment in unconventional gas is coming from large multinationals.”

At the moment, the United States is the only country to have made significant strides in the development of the new resources but other countries with promising conditions are making up ground. In Asia, China is in the process of approving a first wave of permits for exploration, and Indonesia has plans to do the same by 2012. In Europe, Poland is leading the way due to its promising geological characteristics and has already granted 86 permits.

And yet shale gas has seen its image somewhat soiled in recent months by a foul smelling odor that colors otherwise enviable qualities. The reason: a whiff of danger surrounding the practice of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking”, a key technology at the heart of the entire process of exploration and exploitation.

The controversy surrounding hydraulic fracturing

Conventional natural gas deposits are found in pockets of porous and permeable rock and can be extracted through a simple vertical well. Shale gas, like tight gas, requires a different approach as gas containing cavities are scattered throughout the rock and are not interconnected.

“If you just dig a hole you won’t get anything,” states Hedi Sellami, Director of Research in the Geosciences Department at Mines ParisTech and a specialist in underground mining techniques. Sizable quantities of trapped gas must be released through drains that are drilled horizontally to form pathways over which the gas can flow into the well. Yet this is only part of the picture, in order to really ‘suck up’ the natural gas hydraulic fracturing needs to be used. Fluids are pumped into the shale under high pressure to create fissures. “Cracks need to be created and the fractures must remain open,” specifies Sellami. “The composition of the material injected, the ‘propellant’, plays a key role, relying on mixtures composed largely of water and sand.” These techniques are what make the whole process possible.

Hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling have been deployed on a much smaller scale in the exploration and production of conventional gas deposits, primarily as a means to “push” wells nearing the end of their productive life. For use exploiting shale gas “the difference in relation to conventional gas is that a much larger number of wells are required.” This is done to multiply points of contact with the reservoir, explains Jean-Louis Durville, a member of the French corps of engineers responsible for bridges, water resources, and forests, and co-author of a report ordered by the French ecology ministry on the subject.  France could indeed possess significant reserves and to draw inspiration might want to cast a glance east. In Poland, “wells have sprung up very two, three, or four kilometers.”

Recently, the repeated process of well digging and hydraulic fracturing has been accused of causing significant and unpredictable consequences to the subterranean world, particularly in respect to underground aquifers. Criticism was heard from specialist corners as early as the mid-2000s but the rapid diffusion of the documentary Gasland , release in 2010, served as the fuse for the firestorm that followed. The film depicts areas where the industry has already matured and where residents are crying out about the rapid degradation of their health following the implantation wells. A number of the subjects of the film possess carefully guarded samples of brownish water as evidence of their claims. In one spectacular scene a homeowner demonstrates his ability to ignite the water that flows from the household tap and the image is emblematic of the film’s overall tone.

The film received the Special Jury Prize in the documentary category at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival and created a media sensation over the way energy concerns, in their heady rush to exploit the new resource, neglected the implementation of sufficient environmental safeguards.

A poor understanding of environmental consequences

American activists have raised an outcry over a number of incidents but have yet to provide any definitive evidence for their claims. Under the Bush administration, the American authorities initially made an assessment that the environmental consequences of hydraulic fracturing would have a negligible impact on groundwater supplies. A loophole in the 2005 Energy Bill exempts drillers from Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) guidelines such as the Safe Drinking Water Act. The agency has since reconsidered its position and was directed to launch a far reaching investigation in 2010 to determine if there are any shortcomings in the current policy.

In the meantime, public wariness in the face of the new technology has grown more animated, particularly in France where an initial offering of exploration licenses had only just been approved. The government has since ordered a moratorium on all permits for exploration until further review.

Some observers have expressed regrets over the level of public outrage and its arrival before the extent of reserves has even been determined. Jean-Marie Chevalier reflects this disappointment and has orchestrated a debate on the subject for the newspaper Le Monde. “I believe we should first make an estimate of the potential,” he explains. “As an economist, I’m very sensitive to the fact that right under our feet there could be a cheap and abundant source of gas, as well as opportunities for job creation.”

“In the United States the lack of any real controls along with the rapid pace of [well digging] has led to incidents that are clearly linked to gas exploration,” Durville states. “And yet, it could also be said that in relation to the level of activity the number of incidents has in fact been negligible.” The specialist advised a cautious approach until the release of results from the American study but would also like to underline that, “the causes are not always linked to hydraulic fracturing and can often be traced to problems cementing the well.”

An opinion that is shared by Hedi Sellami, who emphasizes the depth at which hydraulic fracturing takes place: “in the well architecture [for shale gas extraction], a vertical hole is drilled as with any other type of well, and this is what passes through any superficial aquifers. Once a depth of about two kilometers is reached a fork is created, a horizontal well […], then fracturing. Fractures commonly extend some ten meters, sometimes more. It’s difficult to imagine how reserves buried so deeply underground could have an impact on superficial aquifers. On the other hand, problems with cement and well casings have been known to arise in the vertical shaft, and gas can escape.” This problem, while it remains rare, becomes more probable when thousands of wells are being installed as has been the case in the United States.

Other dangers exist in addition to the problems with fissures. Hydraulic fracturing requires incredible amounts of water and chemicals to be blasted into the rock in order to optimize the process. For all wells the risk “that weighs most heavily is for contamination of ground water supplies through poorly sealed wells or accidents at the surface,” explains Jean-Louis Durville. “The number of big rigs required to service a well, for example, is staggering. We could easily imagine a tanker carrying dangerous chemicals overturning or pipe leakage during routine transfers.”

Continuing research within a structured regulatory framework

Today, with a lack of any competing technology to hydraulic fracturing for the exploitation of shale gas resources, natural gas companies have been compelled to develop their capability for so-called “clean exploration”. “In the face of increasing environmental and media pressure, companies have made the decision to invest in R&D as a way to improve their practices ,though given the stakes involved many have remained rather quiet on the subject,” explains Jean-Louis Durville. A number of possibilities exist, particularly through restricting the number of chemicals involved or reducing water dependence through recycling programs.

A more extensive investigation into the mechanism of fracturing could lead to greater control of the technology, and could be achieved through techniques like seismic monitoring. “Through an analysis of acoustic emissions during fracturing we arrive at a more nuanced understanding of where the fissures are located,” Hedi Slimani explains. “The technology is advancing rapidly and promises a range of improvements, allowing treatments to be targeted accurately and ensuring they affect only the desired zones.”

In the opinion of Jean-Louis Durville, the American experience has clearly demonstrated the need for a robust regulatory framework. He continues, “if regulation is weak, we shouldn’t be surprised if problems arise.”

In the report he authored along with three other specialists, Durville has suggested a research phase based on strictly regulated exploratory work and recommends “waiting for results from this initial research phase, before allowing any further use of the most controversial technique, hydraulic fracturing, restricting its use solely to what is necessary for scientific purposes.”

Source: ParisTech Review

 

Tagged with:
Jun 28

 

The Financial Times has been looking at the recent flotation of oil and gas companies, including 3Legs Resources, on the London stock market.  What will their impact be on the energy business for the short and long term and what does the future hold for shale gas in Europe?

Read the article here

Tagged with:
Jun 23

 

Could there be legal implications to the French ban on shale gas exploration?  It seems that way, as reported by Natural Gas for Europe this morning:

Environment Minister Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet has confirmed that France faces the possibility of legal actions over legislation banning the exploration of hydrocarbons using the controversial technique of hydraulic fracturing.

Speaking on LCI television, Kosciusko-Morizet said: “There could be court cases.”

Legislators originally proposed the repeal of licenses already granted for shale gas and shale oil exploration.  However the government argued that revocation of licenses would likely result in extensive litigation and the requirement of financial compensation.  Accordingly, the draft legislation was subsequently amended on first reading by the National Assembly to prohibit only the technique of hydraulic fracturing.

Kosciusko-Morizet’s comments indicate the despite the legislation being designed to “minimize legal risks,”  the government is anticipating that it could “open the way” to compensation claims.

France’s upper house, the Senate, recently adopted the ban, but included a critical amendment to the legislation proposed by the National Assembly, leaving the door open to hydraulic fracturing for “scientific purposes”.

The adopted bill stipulates that the current holders of shale exploration permits would have two months to notify the authorities of which technique they planned to employ in extracting unconventional resources.  If they were to use hydraulic fracturing (now prohibited) or did not respond within the allotted time frame, the license would be revoked.

France has already granted permits to companies including Toreador Resources Corp., Vermilion Energy Inc., Total SA and Schuepbach Energy LLC for shale oil and shale gas exploration.

Toreador, whose shares have fallen over 70 percent from their highs, did not respond to a Natural Gas for Europe request for its position on possible legal action.

Vermillion, whose permits are mostly held by existing production, commented: 

”We are striving to work closely with (not against) the French government in forwarding our understanding of the shale oil potential in the Paris Basin and will continue on this positive path.  It remains too early in the process to determine if any legal action may be required, but it would be a path of last resort.”

 

Source:  Natural Gas for Europe

 

Tagged with:
Jun 20

 

As a research fellow, Florence Geny, whose talk at Shale Gas Results in Europe 2011 in Warsaw, Poland was entitled Economic evaluation of shale plays in Europe, had a tough task in offering her insights to a conference hall filled with drillers and service providers who were clearly more “gung ho” on the prospects of shale development in Europe.

First, she noted the gas supply revolution in the US, and how in recent years a reversal of reserves and production declines was occurring. Then Ms. Geny showed the European shale gas provinces, with big splotches covering parts of places like Poland, France and the UK; she noted that many times the shale basins crossed state borders.

A slide in her presentation entitled “Growing industry interest for Unconventional Gas in Europe – A rapid race for acreage” showed that the number of applications for land concessions in Europe last year had shot up like a weed to over 70,000. By country, Poland and France towered over most other countries where unconventional gas exploration had taken place in Europe.

“What kind of level of production would we need to see to change the game?” asked Geny, who looked at the demand side and supply side and showed production scenarios. “I also looked at European gas consumption – even if it covered 5% of it, it would be a game changer.”

“Let’s say it covered 30% – then it would be in the same situation as the US 12 years ago.”

She contended that for Europe, production of 1 TCF/year minimum from 2020 would truly be a game change; at a national level it could change countries’ gas supply mix significantly.

However, Ms. Geny also presented some surface issues potentially hindering shale development in Europe, which she said were high, like the water challenge.

“The water costs will be at least 10 times the cost in the US: EUR 3.4 /cubic meter. It will be a cost driver,” she contended. “Access to land surfaces is also challenging. Poland is actually scoring quite well on the population density scale.”

She reported that different reactions were being seen from the public across Europe in regards to drilling for unconventionals: “We see Poland really pushing for developing the resource, while in France we just instituted the ban on fracturing.”

Regarding ownership of the underground mineral rights, she emphasized that Europeans don’t get a share of the profits.

“It will depend on the project,” said Geny. “There are many variations in every country, in every region. Local knowledge of the concession is important. But these factors translate into high costs.”

Costs was by far the biggest challenge, she said, although her presentation listed factors like shale and tight gas wells being deeper, translating into more frack stages, as well as Europe having a limited supply of suitable rigs.

“In Europe you have a lot of constraints. My view is that drilling and completions cost will be at least twice those of the US. The main reason being that the geological structures are more complex in Europe.”

Geny contends that a drilling operation costing costing $4-10 million in the US would cost $10-15 million in Europe.

“The cost of doing business is in general higher in Europe,” she noted, mentioning labor laws as yet another consideration.

Her slide was entitled “Relative poor economics of shales, Higher costs than new alternative gas supply.” On it, a graph showed the breakeven prices for other sources of natural gas like LNG from Algeria or Qatar or through the Yamal pipeline.

Whereas LNG from Qatar or Algeria costs approximately $4-6/MCF, Ms. Geny’s calculations for Polish shale and German shale are estimated to run around $8-10/MCF. Worst cases could have that figure running as high as $16/MCF.

She contended that a European response was necessary – that a new business model needed to emerge to tackle some of those challenges.

“Operators need to adopt a sweet spot approach as they won’t be able to buy land. On the governmental side governments need to support E&P and fiscal regulations; and a home-grown, trained workforce needs to be developed,” she said.

Geny also suggested that there should be an increased focus on shallow tight gas in Europe in addition to shale gas.

In her conclusions, she pondered unconventional gas’s macro implications on gas markets. Game-changing effects, she said, were more likely at a national level. In terms of price, she expected there would be competition with alternative sources of natural gas supply and a capping effect on the pricing of new marginal projects.

Source: Natural Gas For Europe

Tagged with:
Jun 10

 

On Thursday, June 9, 2011 the French Senate (upper house) adopted a bill on hydraulic fracturing which incorporates amendments to the bill passed by the lower house last month.  While the principle of prohibition of exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbons by way of hydraulic fracturing remains, the bill adopted by the Senate opens the door to fracing under certain circumstances.  Specifically, the Senate’s bill has been amended to say fracing can still take place in the case of “experimental scientific undertakings that aim to evaluate hydraulic fracturing or alternative methods. Such undertakings are preceded by a public investigation that is subject to the provisions of the environmental code.”

The revised bill also establishes a national commission which will be charged with the evaluation and follow-up on hydrocarbons exploration and exploitation techniques.  The main goal of the commission will be to evaluate the environmental risks entailed by hydraulic fracturing or alternative methods, and also to propose projects for the aforementioned scientific experimentation program.  The commission will be made up of members of the state, territorial governments, associations, employees, employers and companies.

As modifications to the original bill passed by the lower house were adopted by the Senate, the bill will now be submitted to a conciliation commission.  The Government expects to have final text ready for adoption in the coming weeks, possibly by the end of June 2011.

An unofficial English translation of the bill can be read here.

 

Source: Realm Energy

 

Tagged with:
May 25

PRESS RELEASE (Unofficial English translation)

Claude Biwer- Senator de la Meuse – Union Centrist

Proposal for a law banning the exploration and exploitation of  shale gas

There is room for improvement: there may be an exploitation of the shale gas compatible with respect for the environment. So, do not close the door “.

The review of the proposed Act on the prohibition of the exploration and exploitation of gas shale, Claude Biwer, Senator de la Meuse, welcomes the adoption by the commission for Economic Affairs of the Senate three amendments he has tabled. These amendments are intended to allow a derogation from the prohibition of exploration and exploitation of gas shale, “projects for scientific purposes to evaluate hydraulic fracturing technique or alternative technical conditions laid down by order in Council of State”. Such a derogation would be “subjected to public inquiry.”

To this end, the Second Amendment creates a “national commission guidance, monitoring and evaluation techniques of exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbon liquids and gases” that bring together state officials, associations, local authorities and representatives of the companies concerned.

To support their amendments, centrist senators stressed the need “not to yield to a catastrophic vision” of the exploitation of shale gas, while recalling that the environmental cost of some operations, including the United States, was unacceptable in France.

The proposal to allow scientific experiments to answer a balance between national issue that could represent the exploitation of oil shale in terms of energy security and the need to preserve the environment: “If science, framed in a government mission, can limit the environmental impact of the exploitation of these hydrocarbons, we can then rely on fossil resources consistent, valuable for the French trade balance in this time of expensive energy. ”

“We must give precedence to reason over passion “, said the centrist senators, recalling that one could not condemn this potential even before the scientific evidence to determine the acceptable terms of information, exploration and exploitation. “There is room for improvement, so do not close the door. ”

The debate will resume June 1 meeting in the Senate. Claude Biwer will be the speaker for the group Centrist Union.

Download the press release in translated English and original French here.

Tagged with:
May 05

A majority of the French people are in favor of developing shale hydrocarbons if it helps lower fuel prices, according to a poll released Thursday.

In total, 62% of the 1,004 people questioned by polling institute CSA, for consulting agency Publicis Consultants France, said they were in favor of extracting shale oil in France if this helps in lowering fuel prices, with price being the most important criteria.

Meanwhile, 33% of respondents said they were against it.

According to a preliminary report published two weeks ago, French shale oil and gas fields are potentially some of the most promising in Europe and banning exploration before the reserves are assessed could be detrimental to France ‘s economy and labor market.

The report was requested by the government in March, following environmentalist outcry at the government-granted permits to explore shale oil fields in the Paris Basin and shale gas fields in the Southeast of France. A final report is expected by June.

Faced with demonstrations and an intense national debate on potential damage to the environment and water tables from shale extracting techniques, the government recently scrapped the permits, and a draft bill to ban all exploration is to be debated at the French national assembly May 10.

For 62% of those polled by CSA, price is the most important criteria in terms of favoring one energy source above all others, while the environmental impact of the energy source came in second. The safe use of an energy came third.

When asked about energy development priorities, 92% of the persons polled said solar power should be the top priority, followed by wind power, then hydropower, gas, oil, and coal. Nuclear came last.

France is the world’s second largest nuclear operator, with 58 nuclear reactors running, after the U.S. and ahead of Japan .

Following the nuclear accident of Fukushima , the government maintained its nuclear stance but has since decided to conduct an audit of all nuclear reactors of the country.

Source: Energia

Tagged with:
Apr 29

On February 4, 2011 the French government launched an inspection commission on shale gas. The Minister in charge of ecology and sustainable development and the Minister in charge of industry and energy requested from two specialized public entities, General Council of Industry, Energy and Technology (CGIET) and the General Council on the Environment and Sustainable Development (CGEED), an analysis of the issues relating to development and exploitation of shale gas and shale oil, in particular with respect to appropriate environmental rules and priority actions to attain.  The exploration and production of shale oil and shale gas in France is currently the subject of a moratorium.

The commission’s preliminary report was issued on April 20, 2011.  This report is generally favorable toward exploration activities for shale gas and shale oil in France.  Various amendments to the legislation and administrative organization are suggested, notably in view of strictly controlling exploration activities, improving the protection of environment and better informing the public.

The conclusions drawn in this report are available for download in English here.

The full report is available for download in French here.

Tagged with:
Apr 22

French Shale Report Favors Assessment Drilling – Update (2)

A preliminary report on the economic issues, social and environmental of shale gas and shale oils in France, is favorable to assessment drilling, but under strict controls.

The report concludes that banning exploration before the reserves are assessed could be detrimental to France’s economy and labor market.

French shale oil and gas fields are potentially some of the most promising in Europe but remain “largely” unknown due to a lack of exploration, and the potential commercial viability of the fields is also unknown because of a lack of tests, the report said.

But “the interest shown…by major oil and gas operators and North American companies which are specialized in extracting shale hydrocarbons, as well as the investments they plan to make, show the scale of the potential,” said the authors of the report, most of them mining engineers working for state agencies.

If the shale oil and gas reserves are found to be important they could allow France to substantially reduce its hydrocarbon imports and its trade deficit, the report also pointed out.

The report commissioned by the Minister for Ecology, Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, and her colleague the Minister of Industry and Energy, Eric Besson was initially announced in February, following concerns by environmentalists and local authorities over the process of hydraulic fracking involved in the extraction process.

Extracting techniques still need to be improved, as far as their impact on the environment is concerned, the report said, suggesting a European study of fracking techniques be conducted and that the drilling of a limited number of experimental wells to assess the impact on the environment be conducted under strict supervision of a national scientific committee, with the involvement of experts from BRGM (Bureau de recherches géologiques et minières), Ifpen (Institute of new energies),  Ineris (National institute of the industrial environment and risks) and from abroad.

It also said that before the environmental impact is assessed, no fracking should be conducted at all.

“In two to three years, the acquired experience in our country as well as in Europe and in North America will allow to make rational decisions over the opportunity to extract oil and shale gas in France,” the report concluded.

A final report is expected by June.

France awarded three shale gas exploration licenses in March to Total SA, Schuepbach Energy LLC, and GDF Suez. Toreador Resources Corp. in partnership with Hess and Vermilion Energy Inc. are among companies which have licenses in the Paris Basin to explore for oil trapped in shale rock.  Continental Resources Inc., Jordan Oil & Gas, and Realm Energy International were amongst companies reported to have made application for territory in the area.

Source: Natural Gas for Europe

Tagged with:
Apr 21

A preliminary report on France’s shale gas prospects released today is in favour of moving forward with operations.  The newspaper Le Figaro published a story on the report, translated here:

Shale: A Favourable Preliminary Report
The preliminary report on the economic, social and environmental issues surrounding shale gas, requested by the French government in February, is in favour of exploratory research and testing moving forward under strict control and guidelines, according to materials released Thursday. “It would be detrimental for the economy and for employment if our country does not conduct (…) a thorough evaluation of the potential richness”, the authors of the report indicated. “With this intention, it is essential that we complete exploratory research and testing”, they added.

They also recommend that research tasks and experiments are given “strict guidelines”. The report suggests the creation of a national scientific committee composed of experts from BRGM, Ifpen (Institute of new energies) and Ineris (National institute of the industrial environment and risks) to compose and oversee these guidelines.

The Minister for Ecology, Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, and Minister of Industry and Energy, Eric Bessons, requested the report at the beginning of February, after having suspended all shale gas exploration in response to environmental opposition.

Locked within shale rock, rather than concentrated in underground pockets, shale gas is extracted through the process of horizontal drilling, which fractures the rock by injecting enormous quantities of water, sand and chemicals.

Click here to read the article in its original French.

Realm Energy will continue to provide updates on its blog as English media outlets cover this preliminary report.

Tagged with:
preload preload preload