The Government is expected to announce whether it will give the green light for two fracking schemes in Lancashire.
Here is some more information about the controversial process.
:: What is fracking?
More properly known as hydraulic fracturing, fracking is a process in which liquid is pumped deep underground at high pressure to fracture shale rock and release gas or oil trapped within it.
:: How much potential is there for developing shale gas and oil?
Assessments by the British Geological Survey suggest there are an estimated 1,300 trillion cubic feet of shale gas resources in the Bowland Shale which stretches across northern England.
There are “modest” shale gas and oil resources in Scotland, with an estimated 80 trillion cubic feet in the Midland Valley and an estimated six billion barrels of shale oil in the area which stretches across Scotland and includes Glasgow and Edinburgh.
And there is an estimated 4.4 billion barrels of shale oil in the Weald Basin in southern England.
But it is not known how much can be extracted, with exploitable reserves thought to be much lower than the total estimated oil and gas.
:: Why is fracking controversial?
The process has been mired in controversy since it hit the headlines in 2011 for causing two minor earthquakes in Lancashire, prompting a temporary ban on fracking in the UK.
The ban was later lifted, with controls put in place to prevent tremors, but fracking continues to attract opponents who fear it can also cause water contamination, noise and traffic pollution.
Environmentalists also warn that pursuing new sources of gas – a fossil fuel – is not compatible with efforts to tackle climate change, and that the focus should be on developing cleaner sources of energy such as renewables.
:: Why is it backed by the Government?
Ministers believe the experience of the US, where shale gas has been widely exploited, shows it could boost tax revenues, create jobs, reduce reliance on energy imports and bring down household fuel bills, although experts have questioned whether it would have any impact on energy prices.
The Government sees gas as key to future energy supplies as it bids to phase out the most polluting electricity source, coal, by 2025, and has said it is going “all out for shale”, with tax breaks and community payments to get the industry going.
:: What is happening in Lancashire?
Lancashire County Council turned down shale gas company Cuadrilla’s planning application for exploratory drilling and fracking at two sites in Fylde last June.
The company has appealed and the applications went to a public inquiry, which took place earlier this year.
The Government is expected to give a final decision by the end of Thursday.
:: Where else has fracking been pursued?
North Yorkshire County Council was the first to give a green light to fracking in the UK.
The council backed an application by UK firm Third Energy to frack for shale gas at its existing drilling site near the village of Kirby Misperton, between Malton and Pickering, in North Yorkshire.
In 2014, Celtique Energie saw its application to drill a temporary well to test for oil and gas in the South Downs National Park, near the village of Fernhurst, West Sussex, turned down.
The refusal came after West Sussex County Council rejected a bid by Celtique for exploration near Wisborough Green, a conservation area just outside the South Downs National Park, the first time a council rejected a planning application from a shale firm.
Protesters stopped Cuadrilla drilling a test site in the West Sussex village of Balcombe in summer 2013.
In Scotland, a moratorium is in place against fracking.