In
NATO's Orwellian world truth becomes 'disinformation'. And Britain's
environmental bodies establish their anti-Russian credentials.
Russia
'secretly working with
environmentalists to oppose
fracking'
Nato
chief, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, says Moscow mounting disinformation
campaign to maintain reliance on Russian gas
18
June, 2014
The
head of one of the world’s leading groups of democratic nations has
accused Russia of undermining projects using hydraulic fracturing
technology in Europe.
Anders
Fogh Rasmussen, secretary-general of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organisation (Nato), and former premier of Denmark, told the Chatham
House thinktank in London on Thursday that Vladimir Putin’s
government was behind attempts to discredit fracking, according to
reports.
Rasmussen
said: “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 organisations -
environmental organisations working against shale gas - to maintain
European dependence on imported Russian gas.”
He
declined to give details of those operations, saying: “That is my
interpretation.”
Fracking,
a process that involves blasting dense shale rocks with a
high-pressure mixture of water, sand and chemicals to release the
tiny bubbles of natural gas trapped within, has been the subject of
protests in the UK and other parts of Europe, and is opposed by many
environmental groups.
It
has been associated with methane leaks and the pollution of water
sources in the US, and green campaigners fear that it will lead to a
rise in the use of fossil fuels, exacerbating global warming.
Rasmussen
made clear that fracking should be used, in his view, to increase
Europe’s energy security, by providing a new source of gas and oil
supply.
Nato's
press office said the remarks were Rasmussen's personal views, not
official policy.
Nato
was originally formed at the start of the cold war as an alliance of
western states, including the US and many European nations, and
historically has often opposed Russia. Rasmussen himself has spoken
out previously against Russia's actions in Ukraine.
Surveys
in the UK have found that there is a potentially large supply of
shale gas and oil, perhaps enough to fulfil gas needs for several
decades, though it is unclear how much of that can be profitably
extracted. No shale gas has yet been produced in the UK.
Russia,
a major source of international gas supplies, recently
signed a $400bn deal with China to supply gas for decades to come,
and has threatened to cut off gas supplies to Ukraine, emphasising
its willingness to exploit its dominant position in fossil fuel
markets for political ends.
But
the future of fracking in Europe is less clear than Rasmussen
acknowledged.
The
Polish government’s leading fracking expert recently told the
Guardian that geology, rather than political concerns, was likely to
be the main obstacle.
Katarzyna
Kacperczyk, under-secretary of state for non-European policy and
public and economic diplomacy in the Polish foreign ministry, and
its leading voice on fracking, told the Guardian: “It is all about
geology, whether you can extract the gas. Different parts of the
world have different geologies.”
She
said that there was “political will” to explore fracking in the
country, but that even so there was no guarantee that Poland would
be able to access its shale gas reserves. Poland is thought to have
some of the best shale gas formations in Europe, but attempts to
exploit it have so far come to nothing, though companies are still
trying.
In
the US, the
development of modern fracking technology has led to a boom in gas
production,
but that situation may not be easily replicated in other, more
densely populated countries, with differing geologies.
Green
groups were swift to attack Rasmussen’s views, saying that they
were not involved in any alleged Russian attempts to discredit the
technology, and were instead opposed to it on the grounds of
environmental sustainability.
“The
idea we’re puppets of Putin is so preposterous that you have to
wonder what they’re smoking over at Nato HQ,” said Greenpeace,
which has a history of antagonism with the Russian government, which
arrested several of its activists on a protest in the Arctic last
year.
Andrew
Pendleton, a campaigner at Friends of the Earth, added: “Perhaps
the Russians are worried about our huge wind and solar potential and
have infiltrated the UK government.”
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