Written ministerial statement by Energy Minister on hydraulic
fracturing.
My Rt Hon Friend (Secretary of State for
Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy) has today laid before
Parliament a Direction ensuring that the Oil and Gas Authority
consults the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial
Strategy on onshore hydraulic fracturing operations.
Under Section 4A of the Petroleum Act 1998 (inserted by Section
50 of the Infrastructure Act 2015), operators who wish to conduct
associated hydraulic fracturing must apply for a Hydraulic
Fracturing Consent from the Department for Business, Energy and
Industrial Strategy.
Hydraulic Fracturing Consent was introduced in the Infrastructure
Act 2015 as an additional step to the existing regulatory and
permitting regime.
However, it does not apply to wells drilled before the 2015 Act
came to force and these are not captured by the requirement to
seek a Hydraulic Fracturing Consent.
Today’s Direction closes this loophole and ensures that the same
approach for consent is taken for all relevant hydraulic
fracturing operations, including where the associated well was
drilled prior to the 2015 Act coming into force.
For these operations, operators will be expected to meet the same
set of standards as required to obtain Hydraulic Fracturing
Consent, laid out in the Infrastructure Act 2015.
The government has been clear that shale development must be safe
and environmentally sound.
The UK has a robust regulatory system which provides a
comprehensive regime for exploratory activities and this
direction will ensure that all relevant hydraulic fracturing
operations are subject to this final step of scrutiny.