Gas Exploration: More reasons why a moratorium is in  order      
             
      13 April  2011      
      Release:  immediate      
             
      For a whole host  of reasons the Democratic Alliance (DA) has been calling for a moratorium on the  granting of gas exploration rights. Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, which is  the process used to test whether shale gas will flow, is not regulated by any  policy in South Africa, and the legal processes that govern the awarding of  rights have serious unintended consequences for land use management and spatial  planning. It has emerged that, compared to coal, shale gas is at least as bad if  not worse as a source of climate change in terms of inducing green house gas  emissions. An academic paper by Cornel University professor, Robert Howarth,  which is about to be published in the journal, Climatic Change, seriously  challenges the view of many applicants for gas exploration rights that the  exploitation of shale gas can be used as part of South Africa’s transition to a  low carbon economy. 
 Today, I will write to the Minister of Water  and Environmental Affairs alerting her to this study, and asking her to engage  with the Minister of Mineral Resources on this matter. It is the Minister of  Mineral Resources who ultimately signs off on gas explorations, after receiving  recommendations from Petroleum Agency South Africa (PASA). But it is the  Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs who is the custodian of efforts to  mitigate climate change.
 Upon submission of the Environmental  Management Plans, PASA is expected to consult with various government department  and agencies. The Department of Environmental Affairs has to date remained quiet  on the matter of gas exploration applications. In reply to a DA parliamentary  question, the Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs stated that, with  regards to the impacts on water, more research on fracking is necessary. When  asked by the DA whether she would meet with the Minister of Mineral Resources on  the matter of fracking, she sadly stated that it was not necessary at this  stage.
 But the case against fracking in South Africa has developed  substantially over the last two months. The Minister of Water and Environmental  Affairs and both the Departments of Environmental Affairs and Water cannot sit  back and simply allow the law as it relates to the granting of gas exploration  rights to take its course. There are simply too many uncertainties. The  environmental concerns are real and the opposition to fracking by South Africans  is substantial. 
 While the results of the study by Professor Howarth  are not uncontested, they do indicate that there are concerns about the levels  of greenhouse gases emitted from shale gas. Not only is CO2 released when shale  is burnt but methane, a far more potent greenhouse gas than CO2, can leak during  the drilling process. 
 South Africa makes much of its commitment to  mitigating greenhouse gas emissions in the future. It has made commitments  following the Copenhagen Accord to deviate its emissions from the  business-as-usual scenario after 2020. It will be hard enough to complete the  deviation considering our growing use of coal. Exploiting shale gas in addition  to coal will make it harder. We cannot ignore new research and we need time to  engage with its findings.
 The DA once again calls on the Minister of  Mineral Resources to institute a moratorium on granting gas exploration rights.  And we believe it is time that the Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs  joins this call.
        
             
      Media  Enquiries:
 Gareth Morgan MP
 Shadow Minister of Water and  Environmental Affairs
 072 528 3910
  
 Kelly Miller 
 DA Media  Officer
 072 226 9759      
             
      Gareth Morgan  MP is the DA's Shadow Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs. He worked as  a high school teacher in KwaZulu Natal before attending Oxford University on a  Rhodes Scholarship, where he read Politics, Philosophy and Economics and also  completed a Masters Degree in Environmental Change. He was first elected to  Parliament in 2004.           
 
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