Frack Off

Frack Off is a grassroots direct action campaign aimed at stopping the extraction of unconventional resources in the UK, specifically concentrating on unconventional gas extraction.

Frack Off
Founded2011
FocusEnvironmental protection
Location
  • British Isles
MethodDirect action
Websitefrack-off.org.uk

History

Frack Off began with a campaign against the use of hydraulic fracturing, colloquially known as fracking for shale gas extraction with a banner drop from Blackpool Tower on 6 August 2011, which also launched the website www.frack-off.org.uk.[1][2]

On 2 November 2011, the Frack Off activists stormed Cuadrilla Resources' drilling site at Banks in Lancashire at 5:30am and four activists scaled the drilling rig and dropped banners. The action was timed to coincide with an industry conference, the Shale Gas Environmental Summit, in London and the release of an independent report commissioned by Cuadrilla Resources which said that its fracking in Lancashire may have triggered two small earthquakes.[3] Fracking later resumed, after changes to reduce the risk.[4]

Frack Off jointly organised "Camp Frack" with Campaign against Climate Change in March 2012.[5] The camp was a weekend event with anti-fracking activists from around the UK coming together with local people from around Lancashire where test drilling for fracking is most advanced in the UK. Camp Frack was attended by around 150 people and consisted of workshops around education, sustainable living, movement building and direct action.[2] The Camp culminated in a march to the drilling site where Cuadrilla is currently drilling for shale gas.[6]

Since then the campaign has broadened out to a campaign against coal bed methane and underground coal gasification too.[7][8]

In summer 2013, the organization was involved in the Balcombe drilling protest near Balcombe in the Weald Basin in Sussex where Cuadrilla was engaged in oil exploration.[9]

gollark: Distributing punishment based on that would make things like advertisements for charities horrible infohazards.
gollark: If you want to know about what *you* should do, then it's more reasonable to ask about the morality of actions, not people, because the people way runs into accursed counterfactuals very fast.
gollark: For that the purpose is probably something like "should you be eternally tortured", which I think the answer to is literally always "no".
gollark: First, consider for what purpose you want to know whether it's "evil" or not to have been that person.
gollark: I don't believe in objective evil and I subscribe to the view that asking whether something is "evil" or not is not very useful because it's a very fuzzy word/category.

See also

References

  1. "Anti-fracking protesters target Blackpool Tower". BBC News. BBC. 6 August 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  2. Melley, James (28 September 2011). "New groups protest at shale gas". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  3. "Fracking protesters storm shale gas exploration site". guardian.co.uk. 2 November 2011. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
  4. Harrabin, Roger (13 December 2012). "Gas fracking: Ministers approve shale gas extraction". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  5. "Camp Frack". Campaign against Climate Change. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  6. UK. "Fracking hell". New Internationalist. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  7. http://frack-off.org.uk/coal-bed-methane-the-evil-twin-of-shale-gas/
  8. "Underground Coal Gasification: Hellfire and Damnation".
  9. radix (19 June 2013). "Fracking In Balcombe: A Community Says No". Frack Off. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
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