Yahoo – AFP,
Jo Biddle, Jan HENNOP, February 2nd, 2018
The Hague (AFP) - The Dutch government Thursday appeared poised to meet demands to halve production at Europe's biggest gas field, as dozens of farmers mounted tractors to protest damaging earthquakes in the region.
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| Dutch farmers protest fracking as govt set to cut gas output |
The Hague (AFP) - The Dutch government Thursday appeared poised to meet demands to halve production at Europe's biggest gas field, as dozens of farmers mounted tractors to protest damaging earthquakes in the region.
Economics
Minister Eric Wiebes said he wanted to cut output in the northern Groningen gas
field "as soon as possible" to a new recommended level of 12 billion
cubic metres.
But first
he said he wanted to discuss the issue with neighbours France and Germany,
hoping to make a decision next month.
Dozens of
Groningen farmers meanwhile arrived in The Hague with their tractors to protest
against fracking, as MPs debated the issue in parliament.
The drama
came as the Dutch mine safety board urged the government Thursday to take
drastic action, seeking to halt the earthquakes which have plagued the region
for years.
"A
major intervention is necessary in order to properly meet the safety standard
and to reduce the risk of damage," the board said.
Although
no-one can predict when earthquakes will happen in the northern region,
"we advise the minister to reduce the gas production as soon as possible
to a maximum production level of 12 billion cubic metres per annum."
This would
be well below the current gas production of some 21.6 billion cubic metres,
which was set in April 2017, and was already drastically scaled back from 53.9
billion cubic metres in 2013.
'Homes
falling apart'
Residents
have increasingly called for all gas production to be halted in the region.
"All
our homes are falling apart," Annemarie Heite, 47, told AFP as she joined
other farmers with their tractors at a protest close to the parliament, adding
the problem had been "ignored for the past five years by our
government."
"These
are man-made quakes and combined with the clay soil we have in Groningen
everything is falling apart, our cultural heritage, our farms, our churches and
eventually also the people."
The low
magnitude earthquakes are said to result from huge air pockets left underground
because of gas extraction.
But tempers
rose after more than 900 homes were damaged in early January when Groningen
province was hit by a 3.4-magnitude quake -- its largest since 2012.
"Farmers
are usually not protesters. They stay at home. But if their businesses are
being ruined, you go bankrupt," Harm Wiegersma, from the Dutch dairy
farmers union, told AFP.
"This
is a clear call for help from farmers," he added.
Gasunie,
which transports gas in the Netherlands and northern Germany, said however such
a radical cut in Groningen gas risked leaving homes without heating next
winter.
Inspector
General of Mines, Theodor Kockelkoren, admitted there were "large
uncertainties" in the latest assessment.
"We
therefore choose to be on the conservative side. After all, it concerns the
safety of the inhabitants of Groningen," he added.
NAM, the
energy company responsible for the gas extraction, is half-owned by Shell and
ExxonMobil and has been extracting gas from the massive Groningen field since
1963.
Last year,
a total of 18 quakes measuring 1.5 magnitude or higher were measured in the
Groningen gas field, according to the Royal Dutch Meteorological Institute
(KNMI).
Compensation will be paid
Top
officials from ExxonMobil, NAM and Shell met MPs late Thursday and vowed that
thousands of compensation claims for damage to homes and businesses would be
paid.
"NAM
is financially robust," said Marjan van Loon, chief executive of Shell
Netherlands.
"All
the bills will be paid," she stressed, adding Shell and ExxonMobil would
discuss how the costs would be divided up.
On
Wednesday, the Dutch government announced it was setting up a new independent
commission next month to assess all claims.
It will
handle some 6,000 outstanding claims filed before March last year, as well as
another 8,000 registered since then.
The aim is
to have as many claims as possible settled by July, with the government then
claiming the money back from NAM.
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