Shale gas licenses may increase UK reserves four-fold

The UK could see its gas reserves more than quadruple. The conclusion is based on estimates from the UK's IGas Energy Group that said its own license in north west England could contain over 4.8 trillion cubic meters of shale gas.
  The company said its technical studies indicate that the licenses
  in the region most likely contain an estimated 2.9 trillion cubic
  meters or 102 trillion cubic feet.
  
  According to Bloomberg, the new estimates released Monday sent
  IGas Energy shares soaring. They jumped 15 percent in London
  trading after the statement was released.
  
  IGas, which is due to start drilling later this year, said in a
  statement that a study "supports our view that these licenses
  have a very significant shale gas resource with the potential to
  transform the company and materially benefit the communities in
  which we operate."
  “Gas in place of about 100 trillion cubic feet (2.8 trillion
  cubic meters) is highly significant, both relative to IGas’s
  existing resource base and the UK’s existing gas reserves,”
  Bloomberg quotes Laura Loppacher, an analyst at Jefferies Group
  LLC in London as saying. “US shale recovery factors are
  generally estimated to be 10 percent to 30 percent with current
  technology.”
  Should 30 percent be extractable, UK reserves would jump about
  850 billion cubic metres compared with BP’s current estimate of
  200 billion cubic metres, more than quadrupling the country's gas
  reserves.
  
  The new estimate from IGas Energy follows the one made by its
  rival – Cuadrilla. Cuadrilla’s estimate revealed that its field
  in the same region in north west England may hold up to 5.7
  trillion cubic metres.
  
  Increasing extraction of shale gas could help UK ease its gas
  dependency on Qatar and Russia.
  
  Exploration and development group Cuadrilla believes it could
  supply a quarter of the UK's gas needs from a resource in
  Lancashire.
  
"There are already over 300 licenses for onshore exploration
  and development, conventional and unconventional, a fifth of
  which are substantial," UK Energy Minister Michael Fallon
  said last month at the All Party Parliamentary Group for
  Unconventional Gas & Oil (APPG) meeting in the House of
  Commons.
  
  Shale gas drilling is however a tricky process. Companies use
  hydraulic fracturing – the cracking of various rock layers by a
  pressurized liquid in order to release the gas trapped inside the
  shale formations. Supporters of the hydraulic fracturing point to
  the economic benefits from the vast amounts of formerly
  inaccessible gas reserves. Opponents of the drilling methods
  point to potential dangers to the environment, including
  polluting ground water, depletion of fresh water, and soil and
  air contamination among other risks.
  
  The UK ended its shale gas exploration moratorium in December
  last year despite environmentalists’ concerns over the
  controversial extraction technology, the International Business
  Times reports.
  
  Conservative MP Dan Byles quoted by IBTimes said that the shale
  gas industry could provide as many as 30,000 UK jobs.













