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A critical assessment of whether shale gas extraction (hydraulic fracturing) conforms with the underlying principle of sustainable development

It is estimated that the eighth largest resource of shale gas reserves in the world is in South Africa. The proposed extraction of shale gas using hydraulic fracturing requires great volumes of water and many hazardous chemicals which also risks water pollution. This can add to water stress because...

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Main Author: Van der Walt, Robert
Other Authors: Glazewski, Jan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Institute of Marine and Environmental Law 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Van der Walt, Robert
author2 Glazewski, Jan
author_browse Glazewski, Jan
Van der Walt, Robert
author_facet Glazewski, Jan
Van der Walt, Robert
author_sort Van der Walt, Robert
collection Thesis
description It is estimated that the eighth largest resource of shale gas reserves in the world is in South Africa. The proposed extraction of shale gas using hydraulic fracturing requires great volumes of water and many hazardous chemicals which also risks water pollution. This can add to water stress because the Karoo is a semi-arid and drought prone region. In this study I will, after taking into account that South Africa receives an average annual rainfall of almost half the international annual rainfall, answer the question on whether the fracking process is a risk worth taking by measuring the process to the underlying principle of sustainable development. The world is faced with challenges in all three dimensions of sustainable development (economic, social and environmental). More than 1 billion people are still living in extreme poverty, and income inequality within and among many countries has been rising; at the same time, unsustainable consumption and production patterns have resulted in huge economic and social costs and may endanger life on the planet. In this minor dissertation, sustainable development will be defined explained and examined, looking at environmental sustainability as well as an in depth look at the underlying principles of sustainable development, examining the advantages and disadvantages of each. However, because the first step in making sustainable development more concrete is the formulation of legal principles, I will analyse the South African legal framework governing fracking as a process. In this minor dissertation it is found that the disadvantages outweigh the advantages within the three spheres of sustainable development.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:51.499Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Institute of Marine and Environmental Law
publisherStr Institute of Marine and Environmental Law
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/20776 A critical assessment of whether shale gas extraction (hydraulic fracturing) conforms with the underlying principle of sustainable development Van der Walt, Robert Glazewski, Jan Marine and Environmental Law It is estimated that the eighth largest resource of shale gas reserves in the world is in South Africa. The proposed extraction of shale gas using hydraulic fracturing requires great volumes of water and many hazardous chemicals which also risks water pollution. This can add to water stress because the Karoo is a semi-arid and drought prone region. In this study I will, after taking into account that South Africa receives an average annual rainfall of almost half the international annual rainfall, answer the question on whether the fracking process is a risk worth taking by measuring the process to the underlying principle of sustainable development. The world is faced with challenges in all three dimensions of sustainable development (economic, social and environmental). More than 1 billion people are still living in extreme poverty, and income inequality within and among many countries has been rising; at the same time, unsustainable consumption and production patterns have resulted in huge economic and social costs and may endanger life on the planet. In this minor dissertation, sustainable development will be defined explained and examined, looking at environmental sustainability as well as an in depth look at the underlying principles of sustainable development, examining the advantages and disadvantages of each. However, because the first step in making sustainable development more concrete is the formulation of legal principles, I will analyse the South African legal framework governing fracking as a process. In this minor dissertation it is found that the disadvantages outweigh the advantages within the three spheres of sustainable development. 2016-07-26T12:17:29Z 2016-07-26T12:17:29Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20776 eng application/pdf Institute of Marine and Environmental Law Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Marine and Environmental Law
Van der Walt, Robert
A critical assessment of whether shale gas extraction (hydraulic fracturing) conforms with the underlying principle of sustainable development
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A critical assessment of whether shale gas extraction (hydraulic fracturing) conforms with the underlying principle of sustainable development
title_full A critical assessment of whether shale gas extraction (hydraulic fracturing) conforms with the underlying principle of sustainable development
title_fullStr A critical assessment of whether shale gas extraction (hydraulic fracturing) conforms with the underlying principle of sustainable development
title_full_unstemmed A critical assessment of whether shale gas extraction (hydraulic fracturing) conforms with the underlying principle of sustainable development
title_short A critical assessment of whether shale gas extraction (hydraulic fracturing) conforms with the underlying principle of sustainable development
title_sort critical assessment of whether shale gas extraction hydraulic fracturing conforms with the underlying principle of sustainable development
topic Marine and Environmental Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20776
work_keys_str_mv AT vanderwaltrobert acriticalassessmentofwhethershalegasextractionhydraulicfracturingconformswiththeunderlyingprincipleofsustainabledevelopment
AT vanderwaltrobert criticalassessmentofwhethershalegasextractionhydraulicfracturingconformswiththeunderlyingprincipleofsustainabledevelopment