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OIL AND GAS
EU energy commissioner reviews future of shale natural gas
by Daniel J. Graeber
Berlin (UPI) Jul 7, 2013


Greenpeace blocks Chevron's Romanian shale gas site
Pungesti, Romania (AFP) July 07, 2014 - About 20 Greenpeace activists on Monday blocked access to a Romanian shale gas exploration site run by US energy group Chevron, in a third attempt to scupper the company's operations.

Protesters locked hands and sat in front of the entrance to a drilling position in the northeastern village of Pungesti.

They prevented a lorry from entering and displayed banners reading "No to fracking", a controversial extraction technique that consists of injecting water and chemicals deep into rock to release gas.

Chevron started drilling its first exploratory Romanian well in May despite fierce opposition from residents who fear it will damage the environment in an area dependent on agriculture.

"Shale gas exploitation can not be done if it affects the life of hundreds of thousands of people living in the areas given in concession", said Laurentiu Ciocirlan, the Greenpeace campaign coordinator.

Chevron insists that its operations respect security standards and says that a decision on possible full-scale exploitation is to be made only in three to five years.

Previous attempts to drill in Romania were suspended twice at the end of 2013 owing to demonstrations by shale gas opponents.

Chevron argues that shale gas could prove crucial for Europe's energy security, especially as a crisis deepens in neighbouring Ukraine, a key transit country for Russian natural gas supplies.

Shale could eventually meet about 10 percent of the energy demand among European nations, European Energy Commissioner Gunther Oettinger said.

Oettinger said companies with reservations about hydrualic fracturing, the controversial drilling practice dubbed fracking, should keep all options on the table.

"I estimate that Europe has the potential to secure about a tenth of our needs this way in the long term," he said Sunday.

Some countries in Eastern Europe are examining their shale natural gas potential. Other countries in Western Europe, however, have placed moratoriums on the controversial drilling practice. Shale efforts in Great Britain, meanwhile, are in their infancy.

European leaders are looking for ways to break the Russian grip on the region's energy sector. Russia meets about 20 percent of Europe's demand for gas. Oettinger in May said members of the European Union should develop stronger energy partnerships to avoid falling victim to "political and commercial blackmail."

Oettinger is a German politician aligned with Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The German government estimates its shale gas potential at between 24 trillion and 81 trillion cubic feet.

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