Skip to content

Fracking and the Precautionary Principle

By Charles Foster

Image> Leolynn11, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

The UK Government has lifted the prohibition on fracking.

The risks associated with fracking have been much discussed. There is widespread agreement that earthquakes cannot be excluded.

The precautionary principle springs immediately to mind. There are many iterations of this principle. The gist of the principle, and the gist of the objections to it, are helpfully summarised as follows:

In the regulation of environmental, health and safety risks, “precautionary principles” state, in their most stringent form, that new technologies and policies should be rejected unless and until they can be shown to be safe. Such principles come in many shapes and sizes, and with varying degrees of strength, but the common theme is to place the burden of uncertainty on proponents of potentially unsafe technologies and policies. Critics of precautionary principles urge that the status quo itself carries risks, either on the very same margins that concern the advocates of such principles or else on different margins; more generally, the costs of such principles may outweigh the benefits. 

Whichever version of the principle one adopts, it seems that the UK Government’s decision falls foul of it. Even if one accepts (controversially) that the increased flow of gas from fracking will not in itself cause harm (by way of climate disruption), it seems impossible to say that any identifiable benefit from the additional gas (which could only be by way of reduced fuel prices) clearly outweighs the potential non-excludable risk from earthquakes (even if that risk is very small).

If that’s right, can the law do anything about it?

The principle has been invoked in the courts. The Court of Justice of the EU (‘the European Court’), for instance, observed that:

[W]hether to have recourse to the precautionary principle depends as a general rule on the level of protection chosen by the competent authority in the exercise of its discretion . . . .

That choice must, however, comply with the principle that the protection of public health, safety and the environment is to take precedence over economic interests . . .’1

That last paragraph looks hopeful for fracking objectors. Or it would if the UK were still in the EU.

But EU law is rather disappointing. A recent exhaustive review of the precautionary principle in EU law concludes:

‘that judicial review can hardly do justice to the precautionary principle, as applicable to the risk management process and underpinning EU legislative frameworks. It will ultimately rest on EU risk managers and EU legislators to ensure that the principle is applied and that its overarching goals are pursued.’

There are some reasons (I hesitate to say that they are good reasons) why a general approach to the precautionary principle should be so cautious. But would they, if EU law extended to the UK, apply to the case of fracking?

Could any reasonable decision-maker, balancing the risk of earthquake against the benefit of a tiny reduction in fuel prices, take the risk? The balancing act concerned isn’t one that can rationally be delegated to risk managers or regulators. The irrationality is at the legislative source. EU law might have provided a remedy.

But we’re now beyond the reach of the European Court, and soon retained aspects of EU law will be excised from English law.

Might there be a domestic remedy – or a remedy in the European Court of Human Rights, to which the UK is still subject?

Well, perhaps. If your house crumbles – or might crumble – under you as a result of fracking, Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (the most elastic of the Convention articles, which, broadly, protects your right to live your life as you choose, and certainly extends to proteting the environment in which one lives) might help.

Under the Article, one’s right to self-determination (in 8(1)) has to be balanced against wider societal interests (in 8(2)). It would be possible to frame the precautionary principle in the context of fracking as a contest between 8(1) and 8(2) in which (if I’m right in saying what I have said above about risks and benefits), 8(1) comes out the very clear winner. And if that’s right, legislation permitting fracking might be read in such a restrictive way that the dangers are eliminated (the court’s primary objective) or, if that’s impossible, made the subject of a ‘declaration of incompatibility’ with the Convention, requiring the UK Government to get its legislative act in order. Other Convention articles (for instance Article 2, which protects the right to life) might be engaged too.

It might be worth a go.

References

  1. Artegodan and Others, Joined Cases T-74, 76, 83, 85, 132, 137 & 141/00 at para. 184.
  2. Article 8 provides: 1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence. 2. There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.

Acknowledgement

I am very grateful to Menelaos Markakis for his helpful comments on a draft of this post.

 

 

Share on

5 Comment on this post

  1. Did not know there was a precautionary principle. Of course, I never knew how many fallacies there were either until following some philosophy posts. Friends in economics and marketing might call this risk management or preventive maintenance. Not so deep a title, maybe, but fit enough for pragmatism.

  2. Good question, Charles. There are, have been, different sorts of pragmatists. William James and Richard Forty had different views, as I am sure you know.

  3. Many thanks, Paul. I asked the question because you appeared to suggest that the precautionary principle had nothing to add to the sort of pragmatism you were advocating. My post suggested that any iteration of the precautionary principle gave a clear answer to the question ‘Should fracking be permitted?’ If I’m right about that, and if your account of pragmatism doesn’t give a similarly clear answer, it would seem to imply that the precautionary principle does have something to add after all.

Comments are closed.