Polish
government accused of gagging anti-fracking groups
Poland’s
government stands accused of considering new legislation to limit the
influence of campaign groups opposed to its plans to frack for shale
gas.
Poland
Environment Minister Marcin Korolec will chair the UN climate talks
in Warsaw later this year
RTCC,
22
March, 2013
RTCC
understands that laws proposed by the hosts of this year’s UN
climate conference would prevent organisations that have not been
active campaigners for at least 12 months from taking part in
consultations.
Polish
NGOs fear this will mean smaller community groups who have recently
formed to oppose shale gas exploration in their local areas will be
excluded from the decision-making process.
Kuba
Gogolewski from the Bankwatch network told RTCC he feared the move
was an attempt by the government to stifle growing levels of unease
in Poland of the environmental impacts of fracking.
“If
you really believe shale gas is the way forward and would be fully
accepted by society you should actually strengthen the local regions
and communities,” he said.
“Poland
is a black horse on climate issues and has been so for some time, one
of the exits it is trying to portray on the European level is shale
gas, and it says that moving from coal to gas is the way forward.
“But
at the same time it is fighting EU climate legislation on every
front. Poland is clearly betting on shale gas and resisting with all
its capacity EU legislation and an intake of renewables”
Gogolewski
implicates state-controlled gas monopoly PGNiG as being a driving
force behind these measures, and warns that the proposals could see
local campaigns to block opencast mining or new power stations kept
away from key discussions.
Poland’s
environment ministry rejects this analysis, arguing that it is
designed to smooth out the planning process rather than ban protests.
Spokesman
Pawel Mikusek told RTCC the proposed laws were misunderstood and that
larger NGOs such as Greenpeace WWF could still participate in
discussions.
“Sometimes
in Poland people set up an environmental organisation, but only in
the name. Just because they want to make some kind of business, and
say we will stop your investment because we will sit in the court for
years and you will never do your job, until you do this or that.
“This
is what we would like to stop – not environmental matters.”
He
added: “In these new regulations we have obliged all investors to
publish on their websites what they are doing on the fields, so
people will have the basic knowledge what’s going on.”
Poland
will host the COP19 climate change talks in Warsaw in November this
year, but any hopes to be seen as a leader on the issues have taken a
battering in the past 12 months.
About
90% of the country’s electricity is generated from burning coal, a
fuel blamed for rising levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the
atmosphere.
Environment
Minister Marcin Korolec has actively promoted shale gas as an
alternative to coal – but questions remain over the effect fracking
has on local ecosystems and how much gas escapes during the
extraction process.
Last
year Korolec fought a running battle for Poland to keep its vast
supply of “hot air” emission credits, meaning the country will
effectively avoid any stringent emission reductions.
On
March 8 Poland had a legal complaint about the EU’s mechanism for
cutting carbon emissions rejected by the European Court of Justice,
and today it was referred back to the same court for failing to
honour renewable energy directives.
“Local
communities, which create local NGOs, cannot be excluded from
participating in decisions concerning the environment they live in,”
said Marta Majka Wiśniewska from the Polish Climate Coalition.
“There
is nothing wrong about organizing yourself for causes that are
important for you. Inhibiting social control and taking decisions
about standards of life of citizens without asking for their opinion
is against democracy and transparency.”
Last
year Polish environmental groups claimed they were operating in a
“climate of fear”, and Ola Antonowicz, from the Polish Green
Network says civil society participation within Poland is low by EU
standards.
“Only
a few people get actively engaged in environmental organisations and
they often do so only when there is new investment potentially
theatening their well-being,” she said.
Estimates
in 2011 that the country could hold as much as 5.3 trillion cubic
metres (cm) of shale gas were recently dashed – last year, reserves
estimates were slashed by around 90% – although reserves of
346bn-768bn cm could potentially serve the country for years.
Poland’s
Geological Institute said in January that accurate estimates of the
country’s shale gas reserves should not be expected before 2014.
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