Cuadrilla Resources
Cuadrilla Resources is an oil and gas exploration and production company founded in 2007. It is headquartered in Bamber Bridge, Lancashire, and has operations in the United Kingdom. Its chairman is Roy Franklin, who is also deputy chairman of Equinor. Its chief executive is Francis Egan. The company intended to develop shale gas in the UK by using high volume hydraulic fracturing, but in 2019 a high court ruling ultimately banned the process. Few wells were ever commissioned, and Cuadrilla, was supposed to have started plugging and decommissioning them in 2022.
Corporate structure
Cuadrilla is a privately owned company with headquarters in the United Kingdom. The company was founded in 2007, financed with investment from the Australian engineering company AJ Lucas and the American equity firm Riverstone Holdings. It is owned 93% by AJ Lucas, while Cuadrilla employees own the remaining 7%. Riverstone Holdings sold their previous 45% stake to AJ Lucas and exited the business in February 2020. In 2009, Riverstone had settled corruption charges in New York through its partner The Carlyle Group.In April 2015, Roy Franklin, Deputy chair of the Board of Statoil ASA, and board member of Santos Ltd, Kerogen Capital Ltd and Amec Foster Wheeler, replaced John Browne, [Baron Browne of Madingley|Lord Browne], who had been chairman since 2007. The chief executive is Francis Egan.
Operations
, the company held licences for ten sites in the UK and had drilled three wells, all in Lancashire, one of which has been hydraulically fractured since 1993 by a previous owner; The company produces gas from that well, completed in sandstone.Lancashire
- Grange Hill, Singleton: Cuadrilla drilled in 2011, and in September 2011 announced the discovery of 200 trillion cubic feet of gas in place under the Fylde Coast in Lancashire. Cuadrilla hoped to recover 10–20% of the gas. and that it could provide 5,600 jobs in the UK at the peak of production. At the same time Lord Browne claimed that the Lancashire discovery could satisfy the UK's gas consumption "for 56 years". The Grange Hill site was returned to green fields in 2018.
- Weeton, Lancashire: The company drilled a well and two small earthquakes were caused by its hydraulic fracturing in April 2011. One of the earthquakes was large enough to be felt by some people at the surface and caused some property damage. The earthquakes led to a government-ordered moratorium on hydraulic fracturing, which has since been lifted.
- Elswick: The gas well had been drilled and hydraulically fractured by British Gas in 1993. The gas extracted from sandstone has been used to generate electricity for the national grid. Bought by Cuadrilla in 2010. Cuadrilla has frequently used this as a showpiece site. Cuadrilla's promotional use of Elswick brought it into conflict with the Advertising Standards Authority (United Kingdom).
- Little Plumpton: Planning permission was refused by Lancashire County Council. However, this decision was appealed by Cuadrilla and the government accepted their appeal in 2016. An appeal against this reversed decision has lost in the Court of Appeal in January 2018.
- On 24 July 2018, the Department of [Energy and Climate Change|Energy Minister] gave Cuadrilla a permit to begin fracking at a Lancashire well. Claire Perry said: "Our world-class regulations will ensure that shale exploration will maintain robust environmental standards and meet the expectations of local communities" in response to criticisms levied at the new licence. Cuadrilla plans to submit an application for a second fracking licence in the near future.
- Becconsall, Banks: drilled in 2011. The site has now been returned to green fields.
Elsewhere in the United Kingdom
Other sites:
- Cowden, Kent: originally drilled by another company in 1999.
- Lingfield, Surrey: expired planning permission only
Poland
Netherlands
Cuadrilla has two subsidiaries in the Netherlands, Cuadrilla Hardenberg BV and Cuadrilla Brabant BV, for shale gas exploration: 27. The company has previously held two licences. The one in Noordoostpolder, which covers an area of over 200,000 acres, is composed of Namurian shales. The North Brabant licence, which covers more than 470,000 acres, is made up of Carboniferous, Triassic and Jurassic shales which are thought to contain tight gas, shale gas and oil shale.In 2014, Cuadrilla requested an extension of its permits for the detection of shale gas in those areas. The following year, the government did not agree to an extension of the exploration licences and as a result these expired during 2015:2.
Hungary
Cuadrilla was previously part of a joint venture for shale gas exploration in Hungary. The investment was sold in 2018 :28. In Tompa 38,796 acres composed of recomplete Miocene were described to contain multi TCF Basin Centred TGS.Controversies
Earthquakes
In December 2018 fracking was halted by a 1.5 magnitude earthquake caused by the fracking operation.On 22 August 2019 fracking at Preston New Road was halted because of a 1.6 magnitude earthquake caused by the fracking operation.
On 26 August 2019 fracking was halted again because of a 2.9 magnitude earthquake.
In 2022 analysis showed that fracking at Preston New Road in Lancashire caused daily earthquakes during its operation.