Tremors above magnitude 3 could be destructive – not least to the Tory party if people’s houses start crumbling, writes David Nowell

Having been taught seismology by Prof Peter Styles, who developed a traffic-light monitoring system in the 1980s that dramatically reduced the impact of coal mining under Swansea for local residents, I believe Jacob Rees-Mogg has a risible scientific understanding about shale gas extraction (Tory MPs angrily challenge Rees-Mogg’s fracking revival plan, 22 September). Vibrations from quarries and building sites tend not to be widespread, compared to shaking generated a few kilometres beneath an area.

The current 0·5 magnitude limit was set so tremors should not rise above 2·5, “because of the increased risk of larger magnitude events”, according to a recent British Geological Survey report. Proposing a higher limit would be reckless, as any anthropogenic tremors above 3 could prove to be destructive – not least to the Tory vote, if people’s houses start crumbling.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Quarter of Covid hospital admissions in England aged under 55

NHS boss Sir Simon Stevens reveals figure as he tells MPs the…

CQC case reveals ‘degrading’ conditions in England care home as Covid hit

Residents at Kettering home left lying in faeces, dehydrated and with infected…

Global green recovery plans fail to match 2008 stimulus, report shows

Exclusive: just 12% of spending on economic rescue packages is going towards…