
British police dispersed hundreds of protesters who blocked access to an oil exploration site in rural England on Monday in an intensification of an almost month-long standoff over the nascent shale gas extraction industry in Britain.
A total of 36 people were detained, both in the village of Balcome and in London, in the first of two days of “direct action” against the drilling process known as fracking, which protesters fear may trigger small earthquakes and pollute water supplies.
Hundreds of protesters converged on the West Sussex village and repeatedly scuffled with around 400 police who were bussed in from 10 different forces around Britain.
While many played drums and sang, others chained themselves to each other at the entrance of the Cuadrilla Resources-owned site, behind tall metal fences down a country lane bordered by dense woodland.
“This protest is part of a huge wave that’s building up,” 32-year-old Mark Weaver from London told Reuters. “There’s a lot of people who are going to be watching what’s happening here.”
Desperate to stimulate a US-style production boom and offset dwindling North Sea oil and gas reserves, the Conservative-led government has backed fracking as an “energy revolution” that can create jobs and lower energy prices.