Reform’s pro-fracking stance could divide potential voters, research shows | Fracking

Research has emerged in the midst of the rows of lifting the ban on Shayl gas drilling within the party, reform in the UK seats or target seats.
A total of 127 election zones in the UK and Wales have Fracking licenses in the north, all of which are financed by Greenpeace website. 34 of them are in the first or second places of reform in the last general elections.
While the biggest figures led by reform support the return of Fracking, this feeling disappears in areas where it can really happen. The reform council members in Lancashire voted against the “Proppant Squeeze” method, a controversial “Proppant Squeeze” method, which was led by reform in Scarborough in North Yorkshire after a series of earthquakes in 2019, and the Planning permission to plan the prohibition.
Fracking has been banned in England since 2019, the last good in Lancashire, the last good, was sealed this year, and the workers’ government said it did not plan to restore the implementation.
The 11 election zones in Scotland also have potential fracking areas, but in 2015, the implementation was banned by the Scottish government separately, and the reform would not expect to have control there.
Reform leader Richard Tice asked for the removal of the ban last week, describing Shayl gas as the başına energy treasure of the energy under our feet ve and said that “leaving this value underground and not removing it would be greatly neglected”.
Boston and Skegness deputy claimed that the earthquakes caused by Fracking during the clues in Lancashire claimed that only a melon is equivalent to a melon from the height of the shoulder and told critics to be “real”.
The reform has long been continuing its support to the Shayl gas industry. When the party leader Nigel Farage was asked if he would scrape the ban in June, he said, “Abso-Bloody.
Other figures, such as Reform Deputy Lee Anderson, who had Fracking licenses and said that he had previously supported the application, were silent in the middle of the current line.
A survey of 3,000 people by Yougov for Persuasion UK research company shows that Reform’s own voters are divided into the issue. Only 17% of the 2024 reform voters support the ban on Fracking, while 43% opposes it, but 40% are not sure.
However, the picture is less open, the picture will have to win to win a seat among the reform potential voters. It is more likely that reform curious labor supporters, who live close to potential fracking fields in the north of England, support the ban against 27% against 27%. And they were more likely to oppose new Fracking licenses, 27% felt strongly against them, only 8% in favor of a strong.
People living near the Preston New Road site in Lancashire experienced earthquakes during Fracking attempts in 2011, 2018 and 2019, and there were more than 200 damage reports in the town of Fylde.
Drilling was stopped after a number of tremors, including 2.9 measurements on the Richter scale.
On Tuesday, Tice said: “There was a problem in Lancashire, but when you talked about an earthquake, if you move your chair back and stand up, you have created an earthquake – Richter scale is about 0.5. Don’t be ridiculous, this is not an earthquake, it stands and moves your chair!
“If you stand up from your shoulder height and leave a melon and hit this place, you will create 2.0 fog. This is not an earthquake – this is the equivalent of a bus passing through your door.
Environmental campaigns, including Greenpeace, point to local dangers and climate risks in other parts of the world, especially in the US, where communities have problems such as methane leakage, water contamination and toxic pollution.
Greenpeace’s Political President Ami McCarthy said: “Farage threatens more than a political earthquake. The plans of reform to create risks, the seismic waves of the seismic waves to the ground and the real life tremor that the people they need to come to power can send their homes.
“Fracking failed in the UK because this destructive industry was not deeply popular and it was strongly rejected by the British people. Many potential licenses need to be won in seats that show that many potential reform voters-and even the reform-led councils-plans are distracted.
“Voters withdrawn with the promise of change of reform will realize that the only thing they really offer is greater profits for higher bills and fossil fuel funds for us.”




