The Groningen Gas Field: The Role of Science in a Slow-Onset Disaster

Tom Postmes*, Nienke Busscher, Sanne Hupkes, Agustín De Julio Pardo, Ena Vojvodic

*Corresponding author voor dit werk

Onderzoeksoutput: ChapterAcademicpeer review

1 Citaat (Scopus)
259 Downloads (Pure)

Samenvatting

This chapter presents a case study of the Groningen gas field. We study the role of science and knowledge in the assessment, monitoring and management of escalating earthquake risks. The case is relevant to climate change in several ways. Around 2006, gas extraction from Groningen was increased with the narrative that gas was the “ideal energy transition fuel”. Gas is more climate-friendly than burning coal or oil, and gas-fueled power plants combine well with renewables (Heath et al. in Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 111(31):E3167–E3176, 2014). Much less attention was devoted to known risks: subsidence, pollution and earthquakes. The latter caused a slow-onset disaster in Groningen. Lessons from this case are relevant to renewable energy initiatives such as hydrogen storage and geothermal energy, as well as to the future exploitations of gas fields, made more likely by the Ukraine war. At the end of the chapter, we reflect on governance of big industrial risks amid climate change.

Originele taal-2English
TitelClimate Change and Safety in High-Risk Industries
RedacteurenCorinne Bieder, Gudela Grote, Johannes Weyer
UitgeverijSpringer
Hoofdstuk7
Pagina's63-75
Aantal pagina's13
Uitgave1
ISBN van elektronische versie978-3-031-56995-1
ISBN van geprinte versie978-3-031-56994-4
DOI's
StatusPublished - 2024

Publicatie series

NaamSpringerBriefs in Applied Sciences and Technology
UitgeverijSpringer
ISSN van geprinte versie2191-530X
ISSN van elektronische versie2191-5318

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