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Robin Webster

03.02.2014 | 3:30pm
yabo 11选5 Polls show shale gas is more popular in theory than practice
yabo 11选5 | February 3. 2014.15:30
Polls show shale gas is more popular in theory than practice
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Public opposition to shale gas could be rising, despite the government’s attempts to promote the fuel, according to recent UK polls. The closer the industry gets to reality – and to people’s homes – the more worried the public gets.

Politicians are waxingenthusiasticabout the prospect of a new UK shale gas industry. But protesters are worried about theenvironmental impactsof fracking for shale gas, and what it will mean for the health of local communities.

Media outlets and industry lobby groups have commissioned a welter of polls to find out what the public thinks. We take a closer look.

Approval for shale gas extraction falling

People’s support for shale gas is wavering, according to a long-runningtracker pollcommissioned by the University of Nottingham.

Pollsters YouGov first asked respondents: “Should shale gas extraction be allowed in the UK?” just under two years ago. In March 2012, 52.6 per cent of those surveyed answered yes. By July 2013 this had risen to 58.3 per cent.

But in subsequent surveys the value went down again, falling to 52.2 per cent in January 2014:

Chart 4 (2)

Anti-fracking protestserupted in the village of Balcombe, East Sussex, last August, attracting a great deal ofmedia coverage. It seems possible that the protests, and the environmental and health concerns raised by the protestors,prompteda slide in approval.

Nottingham university’s poll also suggests higher levels of support for shale gas than other surveys. Three other studies commissioned last August from ICM, You Gov and Opinium asked respondents whether they support fracking for shale gas, shale gas extraction, and shale gas production respectively.

They all indicated lower levels of support than the Nottingham university poll, with about 30-40 per cent of people saying they are in favour:

Chart _4 (2).png

Three of these surveys (Opinium/ Carbon Brief, You Gov/ Sunday Times and the Department for Energy and Climate Change’s tracker poll) gave respondents a “neither” option. The other two didn’t, which may help explain why support was higher.

Lower support for shale gas production in the local area

Famously, the public is less keen on new energy infrastructure when it’s located in the local area – the so-calledNIMBY(Not In My Backyard) effect.

A few polls asked whether the public would support fracking if it took place nearby. In some, respondents were asked whether they would support shale gas extraction specifically, if it took place in the local area. In others they were asked how they would feel about a wide range of technologies, if they were placed nearby.

So the questions aren’t directly comparable. But on the whole, they appear to suggest that about 20 to 30 per cent of people would support fracking in their area:

Chart 3 (6)

A Sunday Times/ You Gov survey carried out last December explored this effect in more detail. It asked respondents if they would support fracking in their local area if it was within a mile of their home, a few miles of their home, or somewhere in the same county.

The poll found that the further away the fracking is, the more likely the public is to support it:

Chart _3 (3)

Concern rising with prospect of a shale gas industry

The public also appears to be getting more worried as the prospect of a shale gas industry moves closer to reality.

The mostrecent poll, commissioned by the Institute of Mechanical Engineers a few weeks ago, shows the least positive response to the question of whether respondents would support fracking in the local area. Just 14 per cent of people said they would be “happy” if a gas well site using fracking opened up within 10 miles of their home.

As the examples above show, the phrasing of the question may have produced a particularly low level of approval.或者它可能是对政府的pro-sha坏消息le gas campaign.

Environment minister Owen Patersonargued上周,反对cern will abate when a few fracking wells have successfully got going, and the public sees it operating without any problems. Paterson may be right, but only time will tell. The polls are likely to keep changing as the industry develops.

Polls we looked at:

Update 5th February: We have updated the second graph, showing in-principle support for shale gas extraction, to reflect the results of the Department for Energy and Climate Change’s lastpoll. DECC asked respondents whether they support or oppose “extracting shale gas to generate the UK’s heat and electricity”. 28 per cent of people said they supported or strongly supported the fuel.

This seems to reflect the general decline in support for shale gas extraction amongst the UK public over recent months – as it’s a lower level of support than any of the previous polls we looked at.

DECC also recorded a very high number of undecideds. 48 per cent of respondents said they ‘neither support nor oppose shale gas’. In Carbon Brief’s poll last August, just 18 per cent of participants were undecided. It may be that, as the shale gas debate heat up, more people feel that there are arguments on both sides – making them less inclined to take a position either way.

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