Fracking-linked
earthquakes likely to worsen – seismologists
Ongoing hydraulic fracking operations will only exacerbate seismic activity, leading to heightened earthquakes in areas where wastewater is injected deep underground, according to new research.
RT,
2
May, 2014
To
unleash natural gas, hydraulic fracturing - or fracking -
requires large volumes of water, sand, and chemicals to be pumped
underground. Scientists attending the Seismological Society of
America (SSA) annual meeting said Thursday
that this storage of wastewater in wells deep below the earth’s
surface, in addition to fracking’s other processes, is changing the
stress on existing faults, which could mean more frequent and larger
quakes in the future.
Researchers
previously believed quakes that resulted from fracking could not
exceed a magnitude of 5.0, though stronger seismic events were
recorded in 2011 around two heavily drilled areas in Colorado and
Oklahoma.
“This
demonstrates there is a significant hazard,” said
Justin Rubinstein, a research geophysicist at the US Geological
Survey (USGS), according to
TIME magazine. “We
need to address ongoing seismicity.”
Not
all of the more than 30,000 fracking disposal wells are linked to
quakes, but an accumulating body of evidence associates an uptick in
seismic activity to fracking developments amid the current domestic
energy boom.
The
amount of toxic wastewater injected into the ground seems to provide
some clarity as to what causes the earthquakes. A single fracking
operation uses two to five million gallons of water, according to
reports, but much more wastewater ends up in a disposal well.
“There
are so many injection operations throughout much of the US now that
even though a small fraction might induce quakes, those quakes have
contributed dramatically to the seismic hazard, especially east of
the Rockies,” said
Arthur McGarr, a USGS scientist. The USGS researchers spoke with
reporters via conference call on Thursday.
Scientists
believe the cumulative effect of these operations could result in
larger quakes becoming more common over time.
“I
think ultimately, as fluids propagate and cover a larger space, the
likelihood that it could find a larger fault and generate larger
seismic events goes up,” Gail
Atkinson, professor of earth sciences at Western University in
Ontario, Canada, said at the SSA meeting.
Seismologists
say that widespread oil and gas development in one area could create
hazardous quakes in nearby areas not equipped to handle activity
above a low-level quake.
“With
these huge wells, the pressure they create can travel tens of
kilometers,” said
Katie Keranen, assistant professor of geophysics at Cornell
University.
As
fracking spreads to new areas like Ohio that haven’t traditionally
experienced many earthquakes, the scientists said more research is
needed to understand the risks involved, for policymakers and the
public.
“There’s
a very large gap on policy here,” said
Atkinson. “We
need extensive databases on the wells that induce seismicity and the
ones that don’t.”
The
scientists said energy industry players must offer more information
on their fracking operations, and data on these actions must be made
publicly available more often.
“There
are minimums in terms of what needs to be recorded - injection
pressure and volume - but these are only made available to the public
once a year,” Rubenstein
said. “We
need more information reported more frequently to do the science
correctly.”
Last
month, state geologists in Ohio said the
link between fracking and five minor quakes in the state
was “probable.”
Outside
of increased seismic activity, fracking has been linked to
groundwater contamination,
exacerbation of drought conditions,
and a laundry list of health concerns for humans and
the localenvironment.
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