Fracking
to blame? Texas rocked by 16 earthquakes in last 3 weeks
RT,
28
November, 2013
Northern
Texas towns are experiencing an intense string of earthquakes – the
last of which was one of the most powerful in 5 years. As unusual
tremors have been going on for over 3 weeks now, many suspect
fracking might be to blame.
On
Thursday, the region experienced two tremors, with one of them
registering 3.6 magnitude, 55 km west of the town of Azle at 07:58:36
GMT, as recorded by the US Geological Service, and the other 2.8 at
08:41:07 GMT, with the epicenter not far from the first one. USGS
records show that the 3.6 tremor was one of the strongest earthquakes
to hit the region in 5 years.
On
Thursday, the region experienced two tremors, with one of them
registering 3.6 magnitude, 55 km west of the town of Azle at 07:58:36
GMT, as recorded by the US Geological Service, and the other 2.8 at
08:41:07 GMT, with the epicenter not far from the first one. USGS
records show that the 3.6 tremor was one of the strongest earthquakes
to hit the region in 5 years.
“It
sounded like a sonic boom, and then the house started shaking,”
Keith Krayer, a local resident who felt the effects of the quake,
told RT.
Krayer
said he had no doubt the quake was sparked by fracking. “When
they frack, they inject all that water and chemicals into the ground,
then they pump it back up and separate the gas from the water, then
they have to dispose of that water 13,000 feet down. It causes the
plates to slip, the lubrication from the water.”
Residents
like Krayer are having their nerves put to the test as the region
chalked up its 16th
this month.
In the last four days, there have been six recorded quakes.
Between
1970 and 2007, the area around the Texas town of Azle (pop.
10,000) experienced just two earthquakes. The peace and quiet began
to change, however, at the start of 2008, when 74 minor quakes were
reported in the region.
Now
an increasing number of people, including scientists, are speculating
that natural gas production by fracking - a process that forces high
pressure water and chemicals into rock in order to extract natural
gas reserves - is the culprit. The problem, however, is proving the
claims.
Cliff
Frolich, earthquake researcher at the University of Texas, said waste
water injection wells from fracking could be responsible for the
recent spate of earthquake activity.
"I'd
say it certainly looks very possible that the earthquakes are related
to injection wells,"
he said in an interview with KHOU television.
Frolich
left room for doubt when he said thousands of such wells have
operated in Texas for decades with no quakes anywhere near them.
Frolich
co-authored a 2009 study on earthquake activity near Cleburne, just
south of Azle, which concluded: "The possibility exists that
earthquakes may be related to fluid injection."
A recent
government study lent credence to Frolich’s findings.
The
use of underground storage wells to get rid of waste water produced
by fracking is “almost certainly” to blame for the jump in
earthquakes in Midwestern states in recent years, a recent Geological
Survey study has found.
The
report said the number of magnitude-3 earthquakes or greater
occurring in the mid-region of North America surged from 29 in 2008
to 134 last year.
The
USGS
study pointed to an unusual surge in tremors near wastewater wells in
many US states, including Arkansas, Colorado, Texas, Oklahoma and
Ohio.
Earthquakes
in Texas in last 3 weeks (image from http://earthquake.usgs.gov)
However,
the USGS stopped short of linking the process of fracking to
earthquakes directly, mostly blaming methods used to dispose of
fracking by-products.
In
January 2012, following a rash of earthquakes, including a
4.0-magnitude tremor, Ohio legislators placed a temporary ban on
fracking after experts said the controversial process for storing
waste water in deep underground wells was to blame for the outbreak
of tremors.
Meanwhile,
the mayor of Azle, Alan Brundrett, said it's crucial to determine
whether the latest series of quakes are man-made.
"What
could it cause down the road?" he
asked. "What if a
5.0 happens and people's houses start falling in on them?"
"Enough is enough!"
Keith Krayer, a resident of Briar, just north of Azle was quoted by
the station as saying. "My
wife, she's having panic attacks because of it."
Thus
far, the rattling has just produced a lot of anxiety. The Parker
County Sheriff's Office has no reports of damage or injuries from any
of Thursday’s earthquakes.
As
of March 2012, Texas had listed nearly 6,000 oil and gas fracking
wells on FracFocus, an industry fracking disclosure site,
SourceWatch.org reports.
The
first instance of hydraulic fracturing – creating fractures from a
wellbore drilled into reservoir rock formations – was reportedly
performed in 1947, the organization notes. Fracking on a commercial
scale, however, was first used in the Barnett Shale – a geological
formation which underlies the city of Fort Worth and at least 17
counties.
The
first Barnett Shale well was completed in 1981 in Wise County, Texas.
Subsequent drilling expanded greatly in the early 2000s due to a hike
in natural gas prices and the use of horizontal wells to increase
production.
Fracking
and horizontal drilling technology have been heralded as an economic
boon by the oil industry, though the techniques have contributed to
nationwide concern about air pollution, groundwater contamination and
broader environmental degradation.
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