| Cardiff and Swansea Universities have been awarded a Fail rating in the People & Planet Green League 2011 published today.
The People & Planet Green League 2011 assessed the environmental and ethical performance of 142 universities, scoring them on their actions and attitudes towards green living. Universities were rated on a variety of measures including: Fairtrade, carbon emissions, recycling, energy usage and curriculum. The highest rated university in Wales was the University of Wales Institute, Cardiff (UWIC), which came 20th in the league and was awarded a 1st. Bangor University (28th) also scored a 1st. University of Glamorgan (50th – Upper Second)), Trinity St David (68th – Lower Second), Swansea Met (94th – Lower Second), University of Wales Newport (94th – Lower Second) and Aberystwyth (111th – Third) also passed the test. But Swansea University failed miserably coming 122nd and was awarded a Fail. Cardiff University (130th) and Glyndwr University in Wrexham (134th) were even worse!! Keith M Ross of Swansea Green Party commented, This is a disappointing result for Swansea University. Just last year the University was proud to host the Climate Change Consortium of Wales. A significant part of the action we need to take to deal with Climate Change will be at the domestic level – changes to the way we live, work and study. Universities have a vital role to play in this by setting the agenda and providing the right examples for future generations. It looks like Swansea University has some homework to do on this score. Full details of the People & Planet Green League 2011 can be found at: http://peopleandplanet.org/greenleague |
Yearly Archives: 2011
Fracking – coming to a place near you soon!
| Based on the PEDL licence regions the following areas are likely to be on the radar of the Frackers. Those in bold have some degree of organised opposition set up.If any one hears of any fracking related developments in any of these areas, please let us know by email:fracking@chyba.go-plus.net
PROTECTED LANDSCAPES THREATENED: Peak District New Forest South Downs Bowland Forest Cotswolds KEY TOWNS CENTRAL TO THREATENED AREAS: Central Scotland: Falkirk/Dunfermline/Cumbernauld/Perth Cumbria: Carlisle/Wigton Yorkshire: Whitby/Pickering/Malton/Bridlington/Hull/Goole/York/ Lincolnshire: Scunthorpe/Cleethorpes/Gainsborough/Lincoln/Grantham/ Nottingham North West: Blackpool/Preston/Southport/Warrington/EllesmerePort/Chester/ North Wales: Wrexham/Holywell/Rhyl/Prestatyn Potteries: Stoke/Stafford South Wales: Bridgend/Swansea/PortTalbot/Pontypridd/Caldicot Mendips: Keynsham/MidsomerNorton Southern England: Dorchester/Poole/Bournemouth/Christchurch/Ventnor Winchester/Andover/Havant/Chichester/Petersfield/Midhurst/Horsham/Crawley/ S.E/Kent/Surrey: Tonbridge/RoyalTunbridgeWells/Crowborough/Orpinton/Croydon/Sutton Deal/Sandwich/Dover |
Fracking for kids – sing the ABC !!
ITV WALES coverage of the Fracking issue last night + GASLAND showing in Llantwit
| ITV Website: “People campaigning against plans to drill for gas supplies locked deep under south Wales, are meeting in the Vale of Glamorgan tonight.”
Refers to the public showing of GASLAND in Llantwit last night. It was great to see Sarah Woods from the COOPERATIVE there, having come all the way from mid Wales, to endorse the film (the Co-op are the UK distributors) and to support and encourage the campaign in South Wales. With their backing we hope to have much bigger events in Bridgend and Swansea before long. Gerwyn Williams (Coastal Oil & Gas) is stating to spread nonsense about GASLAND being withdrawn, such is his desperation for us not to show it and you all not to watch it!! Tough luck Gerwyn, you will have to try a lot harder than that! It was also good to see several people from the Maesteg area and from as far east as Newport and as far West as Swansea in attendance, along with several of the Bridgend Party regulars. Thank you all. Also in attendance was Radio Wales who took quite extensive interviews with Louise Evans, Sarah Woods and myself (Andy). If anyone listens to Radio Wales, let me know if you here anything on fracking in the next few days. There was also good coverage in the Gem newspaper, and last but not least, a nice piece on the ITV Wales 6.00pm bulletin last night, that you can see here: http://www.itv.com/wales/fracking-plans-concern-vale-residents28637/ |
IMPORTANT FRACKING BREAKTHROUGH
| “The leader of a council where exploration firms want to test drill for lucrative shale gas has urged the First Minister to personally intervene over the highly controversial issue. Councillor Gordon Kemp, leader of Vale of Glamorgan council, wrote to Carwyn Jones asking the Welsh Government to take responsibility in planning matters relating to the exploration and exploitation of shale gas reserves.
Coun Kemp said a national Welsh framework policy needed to be drawn up by the Government to guide councils about whether drilling for the gas should be allowed.” South Wales Echo today This has been part of what I have been saying from the outset, so well done VoGCBC! Coun Kemp should be applauded for refusing to be the scapegoat when things go wrong down the line. It is obvious to just about all, bar fudgemeister Tim Yeo, that the only sane thing to do about fracking is impose a moratorium while the ramifications are definitively established by recognisably independent experts. We are getting there, slowly but surely!! Everyone in Bridgend should write to their illustrious AM, Carwyn Jones, and make sure he grasps the nettle, as Bridgend is the epicentre of the area threatened by the fracking menace. Andy |
Thousands of fracking wellheads across South Wales?
| Hi Andy, Would you have any figures on how many rigs, compression stations etc that would be need to service the S Wales region if they went full scale? Cheers Dylan Hi Dylan, I presume you are referring to the figures mentioned on the video from Tara, Queensland, with regards to spacing of well heads. Extrapolating these to the licenced areas of South Wales is fairly simple maths. If you look at the PEDL map ( https://www.og.decc.gov.uk/information/bb_updates/maps/landfields_lics.pdf ) you will see that the licences are for 10km squares for the most part and it is easy enough to count 14 whole squares with a few bits and pieces left over to make up a bit more than one more. So let us call it 15. 10km = 10,000m so at 750m apart we would have 13 At 400m intervals, the sums become 25 per 10km The required density of well heads would depend on local conditions, being higher on shale beds than coal beds for a start. The 750m interval would match what we see in much of the Gasland movie and would seem to be reasonable and realistic of any attempt to optimise extraction in South Wales, in my opinion. The bottom line is that South Wales is facing the prospect of thousands of well heads. And all will be perfectly executed and safely operated? Insane or what! Hope to see you Thursday. Andy |
Collated fracking notes on earthquakes and frack fluid
EARTHQUAKESFREQUENCY OF OCCURRENCE OF MAINLAND UK EARTHQUAKES (BASED ON OBSERVATIONS BETWEEN 1989 AND 2009)
http://www.earthquakes.bgs.ac.uk/earthquakes/education/faqs/faq6.html Here in South Wales we get several of the 1.5 magnitude quakes (imperceptible to people) that caused Cuadrilla to stop fracking near Blackpool every year, along with a couple of the barely perceptible 2-2.9 category. In the Lifespan a fracking operation, we would almost certainly experience several 3-3.9 and be quite likely to see something more significant too (see below). This is irrespective of any role that the actual fracking might have in increasing earthquake incidence and severity. As for more detail on South Wales: In South Wales, on the other hand, although a line of epicentres of significant events can be traced from Pembroke (an earthquake in 1892) to Newport (active in 1974), only the Swansea area shows consistent recurrence, with significant earthquakes occurring in 1727, 1775, 1832, 1868 and 1906. (Given this periodicity it may be that a further earthquake in this area is due in the near future.) http://www.earthquakes.bgs.ac.uk/hazard/Hazard_UK.htm#space (again) This line of significant epicentres goes straight through the licenced areas the frackers have their sights on. See map here: http://www.earthquakes.bgs.ac.uk/hazard/Hazard_UK.htm#space This map shows that there were known earthquakes in the Fylde area where Cuadrilla have ground to a halt. The stakes are so high they will always take the risk. They bank on catastrophe not happening until after they are out of the area. But they know it can always happen and, as with BP in the Gulf recently, have large contingency funds and such massive profits that they can just shrug it off in next to no time. The whole safety case of fracking operations rests on the integrity of the well casings – made largely of ……. Cement! Ignoring the near practical impossibility of lining boreholes that are many hundreds of meters long and bent with cement that has no weak spots or imperfections, cement is hardly renowned for its flexibility and ability to withstand shocks, so given the shocks induced by the explosions used in fracking and the whole scale shock waves of natural seismic activity, who gives any credence to the guarantees of operators whose merest sense of responsibility causes them to shut down operations after a piddly 1.5 quake? Remember, the Richter scale is a logarithmic scale. Scale 2 is 10 time the size of a scale 1. Scale 3 is ten times scale 2, or 100 times scale 1, etc. FRACK CHEMICALS Cuadrilla downplay the nastiness of their frack fluid: http://www.cuadrillaresources.com/what-we-do/technology/fracturing-fluid/ They list the ingredients thus:
Firstly, do the math. That adds up to a mere 99.955%. Leaving 0.045% completely unaccounted for. The list of candidates is extensive and nasty. Some are listed here: http://en.Wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_fracturing Makes you wonder when they list hydrochloric acid openly. This is known to have a corrosive effect on human tissue, with the potential to damage respiratory organs, eyes, skin, and intestines. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrochloric_acid#Safety As for polyacrimides, concerns have been raised that polyacrylamides in the environment may contaminate food with the nerve toxin acrylamide. While polyacrylamide itself is relatively non-toxic, it is known that commercially available polyacrylamide contains minute residual amounts of acrylamide remaining from its production, usually less than 0.05% w/w. Additionally, there are concerns that polyacrylamides may de-polymerise to form acrylamide. In dilute aqueous solution, such as is commonly used for Enhanced Oil Recovery applications (and fracking!), polyacrylamide polymers are susceptible to chemical, thermal, and mechanical degradation. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyacrylamide As for biocide! What do you need to know beyond the fact that the term covers anything that kills living things!! Returning to Cuadrilla’s own words: “Upon returning to the surface, they [frack fluids] are stored in steel tanks and at no point come in contact with the ground. In the unlikely event that any liquid was spilt on the surface, seepage at ground level is prevented by the installation of an impermeable membrane on land at and surrounding the well site.”
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Greenwashing
| Speaks for itself! |
Frickin Frackin Blues + FREE Gasland showing
| Yet another way of getting the anti-fracking message across to a wider audience. Spread it far and wide.
http://www.broadjam.com/transmit/index.php?txygnbz=3997&chkldsxv1=A53E7D8D14&yhgbndsq=1 Just to confirm, the meeting on the Thursday 16th has been postponed to allow people to attend the free showing of GASLAND at the Llatonian Hall in Llantwit Major. Film starts at 7.30pm. This event is courtesy of the Vale Says No! / No Fracking UK campaign groups and the Co-operative. A Co-operative officer will be in attendance on Thursday and one of the things I am working on with her is a high profile event, centred on the GASLAND film, in Bridgend sometime soon. So if you cannot get to Llantwit this week, you will get another chance to see the film – quite possibly in the brand new state of the art theatre at Bridgend College. Watch this space. |
Directory of anti-fracking groups worldwide
| Not comprehensive – but still quite an impressive list. The video from Australia gives a glimpse of what South Wales will look like when the frackers get in their stride. AUSTRALIA:
The Residents of the Tara Estate near Chinchilla, Queensland have decided enough is enough and are blockading QGC from entering their estate. They have Locked Their Gates.
NEW ZEALAND: Frack Free Aotearoa https://www.facebook.com/groups/186342878145351/ CANADA:
FRANCE:
GERMANY:
IRELAND: http://nofrackingireland.wordpress.com/ SOUTH-AFRICA:
SWEDEN:
UK:
USA:
Living the Drill (This is a registry for anyone, anywhere in the world, whose water, air quality, land, business, health, or community has been adversely affected by gas drilling or gas pipelines. Read their stories here) http://www.facebook.com/pages/Living-the-Drill/144221602300131 |
