Industry regulator the Oil & Gas Authority said in a statement that it has granted a total of 93 onshore licences covering 159 block areas across England, most of the permits for exploration for shale oil or gas.
"This ... Enables a significant amount of the UK's shale prospects to be taken forward to be explored and tested," said OGA chief executive Andy Samuel.
Energy companies that have won licences include Ineos, Cuadrilla Resources and GDF Suez.
The news comes one day after British lawmakers narrowly voted in favour of allowing fracking under national parks, despite earlier promises of a ban.
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"Alongside conventional drilling sites, we need to get shale gas moving," said British energy minister Andrea Leadsom today.
"Now is the time to press ahead and get exploration under way so that we can determine how much shale gas there is and how much we can use."
Prime Minister David Cameron has previously pledged to go "all-out for shale", viewing it as a valuable energy source amid dwindling North Sea oil fields.
Opponents fear that fracking -- a way of extracting gas by blasting water, chemicals and sand underground -- could pollute water supplies, scar the countryside, and trigger earthquakes.
Pressure group the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE) said today the new licence blocks included land in three national parks and six "areas of outstanding natural beauty", opening the possibility for fracking underneath the protected areas.
"We have always opposed fracking in protected areas, so it is outrageous to see licences announced for fracking underneath three National Parks and five AONBs," said Emma Marrington, rural policy campaigner at the CPRE.