Article

The U.K.'s "Dash for Gas" A Rapid Evidence Assessment of Fracking for Shale Gas, Regulation and Public Health

Details

Citation

Watterson A & Dinan W (2017) The U.K.'s "Dash for Gas" A Rapid Evidence Assessment of Fracking for Shale Gas, Regulation and Public Health. New Solutions, 27 (1), pp. 68-91. https://doi.org/10.1177/1048291117698175

Abstract
The evidence on public health regulation of the unconventional gas extraction (fracking) industry was examined using a rapid evidence assessment of fifteen case studies from multiple countries. They included scientific and academic papers, professional reports, government agency reports, industry and industry-funded reports, and a nongovernment organization report. Each case study review was structured to address strengths and weaknesses of the publication in relation to our research questions. Some case studies emphasized inherent industry short-, medium-, and long-term dangers to public health directly and through global climate change impacts. Other case studies argued that fracking could be conducted safelyassumingindustry best practice, “robust” regulation, and mitigation, but the evidence base for such statements proved generally sparse. U.K. regulators’ own assessments on fracking regulation are also evaluated. The existing evidence points to the necessity of a precautionary approach to protect public health from unconventional gas extraction development.

Keywords
fracking; public health; precaution; regulation; rapid evidence assessment

Journal
New Solutions: Volume 27, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date31/05/2017
Publication date online21/03/2017
Date accepted by journal01/02/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/25269
PublisherSAGE
ISSN1048-2911

People (1)

People

Dr William Dinan

Dr William Dinan

Senior Lecturer, Communications, Media and Culture