Texans
angrily protest fracking after 30 earthquakes hit town
RT,
21
January, 2014
Dozens
of residents from a rural Texas community traveled to the state
capital on Tuesday to demand that regulators act immediately to ban
hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, amidst allegations it’s to blame
for a spate of recent earthquakes.
The
Azle, TX area north of Fort Worth has experienced no fewer than 30
earthquakes since November, and residents say it’s a result of
increased fracking activity.
Fracking,
a process of injecting large quantities of a chemical cocktail into
the earth to tap subterranean natural gas reserves, has long been
associated with seismic activity, and researchers last year linked
drill sites to a series of quakes in parts of Ohio. Some Azle-area
residents now say there’s no doubt that recent tremors across town
have been brought on by similar operations in the Lone Star State,
and on Tuesday they assembled before the Texas Railroad Commission to
demand they action.
Around
50 residents had planned to attend Tuesday’s hearing, but
eyewitnesses at the event estimated that close to 100 fracking
opponents came to complain. The commission, which regulates mineral
energy production in the state of Texas, heard testimonies from no
fewer than two dozen of those critics.
“No
disrespect, but this isn’t rocket science here,” Reno Mayor Lynda
Stokes testified during the hearing. “Common sense tells you the
wells are playing a big role in all this.”
At
one point during the hearing, a man who identified himself as a
retired rocket scientist said it doesn’t take someone with his
expertise to see that increased fracking is causing the quakes.
“The
correlation of increased fracking wastewater disposal and increased
earthquakes is blindingly obvious,” another attendee, Sharon Wilson
of the Earthworks Oil and Gas Accountability Project, told the
commission.
“If
Texas regulators want to show that they’re not owned by the oil and
gas industry,” Wilson said, they can “act now, study later.”
When
Wilson later on read to the commission her requests, the crowd
erupted in applause.
“We
have three things that we’d like to ask for,” Wilson said. “We’d
like to ask for wastewater injection to halt until the science exists
to prevent related earthquakes; we’d like all seismic data
collected to be publically available online and in real time; [and]
we’d like those responsible for the injection wells to be held
presumptively liable for damages caused earthquakes in the area.”
Larry
Griffith of Briar, TX told the commission that his mobile home is
roughly five miles away from the nearest fracking site but has felt
the quakes nonetheless.
“I
was standing in my house and it felt like a big truck hit the struck
of the side of the house,” he said.
“You’re
putting a layer of water underneath an open hole that’s causing the
ground to be unstable. Who’s to say it’s not going to collapse
and cause tremors?” Griffith asked.
Geologist
Billy Caldwell told WFAA News ahead of the hearing that he has spent
more than 50 years evaluating wells within the state for the oil and
gas industry, and estimated that the big wigs involved in fracking
drills wouldn’t be happy with his research.
“Caldwell
said there are three small fault lines directly northwest of Azle,”
the station reported. “He thinks it is likely that water being
injected back into the earth at fracking disposal sites is leaking
into these fault planes.”
“That
causes slippage, and that causes the earthquakes," Caldwell told
WFAA.
Todd
Unger at WFAA reported that the commissions claims they are in the
process of looking for a seismologist to examine local drill sites,
but the group has already determined that at least one of the
injection drills has had issues.
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