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OIL AND GAS
British public "rightly concerned" by fracking operations
by Daniel J. Graeber
London (UPI) May 20, 2013


Militants in restive Sinai Peninsula attack Egyptian gas pipeline
Cairo (UPI) May 20, 2013 - Egyptian media said Tuesday militants in the Sinai Peninsula bombed a natural gas pipeline in a regional industrial zone, though no injuries were reported.

Ahram Online reported unknown assailants blew up the pipeline that supplies regional industries in the city of Arish. The blast was described as powerful, though no other details were provided.

Militants in the restive peninsula have targeted the region's gas infrastructure repeatedly since the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak in 2011.

The latest attack follows a push by the Egyptian government to address a lingering gas shortage. The Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum expects domestic gas production will increase 1.7 percent this year, though consumption is expected to increase by 12.5 percent.

More than a dozen new natural gas wells are expected to be tied into the national grid this year in an effort to increased gas production.

A country report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, published in July, says Egypt may be forced to import natural gas for the first time in recent history to cope with rising demand.

A British energy sector move toward shale natural gas is a move in the wrong direction and the public is taking notice, a British advocacy group said.

British Friends of the Earth said it was frustrated by a decision by shale gas explorer Cuadrilla Resources to consider a hydraulic fracturing campaign in Lancashire.

Cuadrilla said Monday it was listening closely to the public's reaction to the potential drilling operations in Lancashire. Chief Executive Francis Egan said the engagement with the local community has been "extensive."

Friends of the Earth campaigner Helen Rimmer said in response, however, the public was concerned about the risks of the fledgling shale effort in the country.

"The public is rightly concerned that fracking causes more problems than it solves," she said.

Cuadrilla Resources in March said it believes there are 200 trillion cubic feet of shale natural gas in the Bowland basin in Lancashire.

The controversial drilling practice, dubbed fracking, uses trace amounts of chemicals that may be hazardous to human health. Minor tremors were reported in 2012 near Cuadrilla fracking operations.

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