Activists
ask 'what NATO's smoking' as general raves over green plot
Greenpeace has denied a NATO claim that Russia is secretly working with EU environmental groups to oppose fracking. NATO secretary-general Anders Fogh Rasmussen has alleged Russia is trying to promote dependence on its gas exports through sabotage.
Rasmussen
told reporters Thursday that Russian intelligence agencies were
secretly funding and collaborating with European environmental groups
to prevent shale gas exploitation through a process known as
fracking.
“I
have met allies who can report that Russia, as part of their
sophisticated information and disinformation operations, engaged
actively with so-called non-governmental organizations –
environmental organizations working against shale gas – to maintain
European dependence on imported Russian gas,” he told an audience
at Chatham House, the international affairs think-tank.
However,
Rasmussen refrained from giving any further evidence to back up his
assertions.
Greenpeace
derided the idea that the Russian government is masterminding public
opposition to fracking as ridiculous.
“The
idea we’re puppets of Putin is so preposterous that you have to
wonder what they’re smoking over at NATO HQ,” a Greenpeace
spokesman said, responding to NATO’s claims. "Mr Rasmussen
should spend less time dreaming up conspiracy theories and more time
on the facts.”
In
addition, a representative from the environmental group Rising Tide,
Tony Cottee, told The Independent that Rasmussen had no idea what is
happening on the ground.
“It
shows how ludicrously out of touch these people are. He clearly
doesn’t know the type of person that has been turning up to
demonstrate,” he said.
The
practice of fracking entails blasting water and chemicals at high
pressure into fissures in rocks thousands of meters underground to
extract hidden deposits of gas and oil. There has been significant
public opposition to fracking because of the environmental
side-effects it has caused in the past. Scientists say that the
practice can cause water contamination as well as small earthquakes.
In
the UK, the government has championed fracking as a way of driving
down rising utility bills and creating jobs. The British Geographical
Survey has estimated there could be 1,300 trillion cubic feet of gas
contained in shale rocks in the North of England, while it estimates
the South could hold between 2.2 billion and 8.6 billion barrels of
shale oil.
Nevertheless,
the exploitation of fracking reserves has prompted strong opposition
from residents who will be affected by the process. The government
triggered a sharp reaction from 'fracktivists' when it announced
plans earlier this year to change trespassing laws to allow fracking
on private land.
In
response, Greenpeace activists blocked access to Prime Minister David
Cameron’s home in the Cotswolds, erecting a metal fence and putting
up a sign that read: “We apologise for any inconvenience we may
cause while we frack under your home.”
The
activists also tried to deliver a novelty check for 50 pounds ($84) –
the amount ministers have said will be compensated to individual
homeowners if fracking is conducted under their property.
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