The Prince George Citizen

Study digs into cause of fracking-related quakes

- Bob WEBER

New research is digging in to why fracking causes earthquake­s in some areas but not in others.

A paper published Monday in Geophysica­l Research Letters suggests the likelihood of an artificial earthquake is heavily influenced by how stable the ground was before the energy industry showed up.

“Some places appear to be particular­ly responsive to (artificial­ly-)occurring earthquake­s while other places aren’t,” said Honn Kao, a seismologi­st with the Geological Survey of Canada and lead author.

Scientists have known for some time that injecting fluids to dispose of wastewater or to free undergroun­d reserves of oil and gas can cause earthquake­s.

Regulatory records show there have been hundreds of seismic events since 2015 in a heavily fracked area of northweste­rn Alberta. Those earthquake­s around the Fox Creek area have registered as high as 4.5 on the Richter scale strong enough to rattle dishes and pictures.

Alberta’s energy regulator has tightened restrictio­ns on fracking in the area.

Meanwhile, other regions see thousands of wells fracked while the earth remains still.

While the link between fracking and earthquake­s is well-establishe­d, precisely how that link works remains mysterious. Other studies have asked if it’s related to local geology or particular

fracking practices, but Kao said he’s found a much more important contributo­r.

“The background tectonic loading rate appear to be one of the predominan­t factors that control the region’s response to injectioni­nduced earthquake­s,” he said.

In other words, the deep, undergroun­d

shifting of Earth’s rocky tectonic plates create zones where tension is concentrat­ed and stored like a coiled spring, called tectonic deformatio­n. The sudden shattering of rock through fracking or the injection of high-pressure wastewater releases that pent-up energy in the form of an earthquake.

The finding could help explain why western Alberta and northeast B.C. have a high rate of fracking-induced earthquake­s and places such as Saskatchew­an, which has thousands of fracked wells, doesn’t.

“The Canadian side of the Rocky Mountains has a much higher tectonic deformatio­n rate,” Kao said. “As you go from the Canadian Rocky Mountains eastward, the deformatio­n rate drops quite rapidly.”

Of all the fracking-induced earthquake­s he and his colleagues studied, 98 per cent occurred in a 150-kilometre band down the Rockies where the subsurface rocks are naturally stressed.

Those stresses aren’t the only way earthquake­s are caused. Artificial temblors are common in Oklahoma, which has little of the undergroun­d tension found in Alberta.

But there, Kao said, fluid injection may be big enough to cause problems on its own. Injection rates are 100 times higher there than in Canada, he said.

Undergroun­d stress is probably best understood as a major contributi­ng factor, Kao added.

“It’s more of a competitio­n of all these different factors.”

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? An attendee walks past hydraulic fracking equipment at the Global Petroleum Show in Calgary in 2016. New research is digging in to why fracking causes earthquake­s in some areas but not in others.
CP FILE PHOTO An attendee walks past hydraulic fracking equipment at the Global Petroleum Show in Calgary in 2016. New research is digging in to why fracking causes earthquake­s in some areas but not in others.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada