![]() |
| A condemned and shored-up cafe in Zeerijp. Photo: Graham Dockery |
The
province of Groningen was hit by a strong earthquake in the early hours of
Wednesday morning, as the ground continues to settle following the extraction
of natural gas.
Hundreds of people have reported feeling the quake, which hit
shortly before 6am. ‘The people of Groningen were shaken away,’ one person said
on Twitter.
By 11am, officials had received 90 reports of damage, including 12
requiring immediate assessment, news agency ANP said.
The quake measured 3.4 on
the Richter scale, making it the third strongest in the province since the
problems began. ‘This will have caused damage,’ a spokesman for the KNMI
seismology unit said.
Prime minister Mark Rutte told television show
Goedemorgen Nederland that he hoped the damage had been limited. In the 1950s
everyone was so optimistic about the gas find, but it has now ‘changed into a
nightmare,’ Rutte said.
The quake’s epicentre was in Loppersum, where last
year’s major quake was also centred. That quake, and the public outcry, led the
government to agree to phase out drilling for gas completely.
Inquiry
In March
MPs unanimously backed calls for a parliamentary inquiry into the gas extraction
project in Groningen province, 60 years after the gas fields were first tapped.
The first gas was piped up from three kilometers under Groningen province in
1959 and the field was said to be one of the biggest in the world.
Gas
extraction was put in the hands of NAM, a 50:50 joint venture between Shell and
Esso, now ExxonMobil. Gas extraction increased in the following years,
providing a major source of income for the government as well as NAM.
The first
earthquake hit in 1986 and there have been over 1,000 since then. Most were
light and considered irrelevant by The Hague. But in 2012 the province was hit
by a quake measuring 3.6 on the Richter scale which caused considerable damage
to hundreds of homes and other buildings.
Since then pressure has mounted on
the government to wind down production and last year the government decided
that gas extraction would stop altogether in 2030.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.