‘Widely reported’ stories claim Putin regime funded some fracking opposition, says Rees-Mogg

“Widely reported” stories have claimed some of the opposition to fracking for shale gas had been funded by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s regime, Jacob Rees-Mogg has said.

As he was criticised by opposition and Tory MPs about his announcement to lift a ban on fracking in England, the business and energy secretary said he was “well aware that there have been objections to fracking”.

“But I would also note that there have been stories widely reported that some of the opposition to… fracking has been funded by Mr Putin’s regime.”

He was responding to a question from Labour’s Cat Smith, who said there “is no public support for fracking”.

Shadow climate change secretary Ed Miliband later tweeted the claim was an “outrageous slur”.

Rowan Ryrie protesting fracking today in Mr Rees-Mogg’s North East Somerset constituency said the “smear” is “desperate”.

“The anti-fracking movement is largely not funded at all, it’s people that care enough to stand up for our environment,” she said.

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Sky News has contacted the business department to ask for the evidence that informed the secretary of state’s claim, which was also made by the-then NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen in 2014.

The former secretary general said at the time: “I have met allies who can report that Russia, as part of their sophisticated information and disinformation operations, engaged actively with so-called non-governmental organisations – environmental organisations working against shale gas – to maintain European dependence on imported Russian gas.”

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But Mr Rasmussen did not detail the nature of his suspicions.

The drive to unlock shale gas stored in rock underground is part of a government bid to secure Britain’s energy security, since President Putin’s “illegal invasion of Ukraine and weaponisation of energy,” Mr Rees-Mogg said as he announced the lifting of the moratorium.

The moratorium on fracking had been in place since 2019 following a series of earth tremors and Conservatives representing seats in northern England criticised the move to end it amid accusations of a broken Tory manifesto promise.

Labour and several green groups say that the gas would take a decade to come on stream, and therefore would do little to enhance security. They say the government should cut demand, including by insulating homes, instead of increasing supply.

Labour also said the government had created a “charter for earthquakes” while the Liberal Democrats said voters in rural areas were being treated as “guinea pigs” for the fracking industry.

But Mr Rees-Mogg said fracking was in the national interest and would make the country richer.