Politicians should focus on energy efficiency and renewables, not distract themselves with shale gas

David Adams

Some years ago US researchers asked subjects to watch a video of people playing basketball. The subjects were told to count the number of passes made by the teams. So intent were the subjects on watching the ball that half of them failed to notice the person in the gorilla suit strolling through the scene. It鈥檚 an experiment that has been replicated many times since.

I couldn鈥檛 help thinking of that experiment when watching the unfolding events at Balcombe last month. The carnival of protesters, the six-figure police operation, the use of the word 鈥渇rack鈥 on placards as a more acceptable but equally clear expletive to express exactly what Cuadrilla can do with their drilling. It鈥檚 all just counting basketballs.

The shale gas story provides reassurance that civil action is not dead

The invisible gorilla experiment demonstrated the power of distraction. And that鈥檚 what I believe that shale gas is: a fossil fuel which is distracting our politicians from promoting and driving through energy efficiency and renewables the real, sustainable solutions. It鈥檚 a distraction from the depressing reality of the highest levels of CO2 in the world鈥檚 atmosphere since the Pliocene period. 

The shale gas story provides reassurance that civil action is not dead, as once feared, even in the true-blue heartlands of West Sussex. But I鈥檒l reserve my cheers until I see an MP arrested for chaining themselves to a cold and draughty house and demanding its insulation.

David Adams is technical director at Willmott Dixon energy services