Albuquerque Journal

Oklahoma earthquake risk remains elevated

California also at higher risk this year

- BY SETH BORENSTEIN

WASHINGTON — Federal scientists forecast that Oklahoma will continue to have the nation’s biggest man-made earthquake problem this year but it probably won’t be as shaky as recent years.

In its annual national earthquake outlook , the U.S. Geological Survey reported Wednesday that a large portion of Oklahoma and parts of central California have the highest risk for a damaging quake this year: between 5 and 12 percent. The outlook is published in the journal Seismologi­cal Research Letters.

Natural elevated quake risks exist through much of California, Seattle and the area where Missouri, Tennessee, Arkansas, Kentucky and Illinois come together, known as New Madrid. Seismologi­sts say Oklahoma’s problem is triggered by undergroun­d injections of huge volumes of wastewater from oil and gas drilling.

USGS seismic hazard chief Mark Petersen says Oklahoma’s recent regulation wastewater injection is starting to work, so scientists slightly reduced Oklahoma’s risk this year. He also said the lower production of oil, which reduces drilling and waste disposal, may be a factor.

From 1980 to 2000, Oklahoma averaged only two earthquake­s a year of magnitude 2.7 or higher. That number jumped to about 2,500 in 2014 then to 4,000 in 2015 as the use of an oil and gas production technique that uses millions of gallons of water boomed. It dropped to 2,500 last year, after Oklahoma restricted volume of wastewater injections, according to the study.

Petersen said he expects shaking to be perhaps slightly less than last year’s 2,500, with the highest risk area shifting a bit north and east in the state. Last year also had some unusually big quakes there, including a magnitude 5.8 in Pawnee and a magnitude 5.0 in Cushing.

“We know that already in the first couple months of this year, the rates did come down,” Petersen said in an interview. “This is exactly what we wanted.”

Petersen said he doesn’t know when or if Oklahoma will ever get back to before 2008 activity levels of far less than one a day. That depends on economic and regulatory issues, he said in a Wednesday press conference.

In a statement last week, Oklahoma gas and oil regulator Tim Baker said the state noticed earthquake­s coming down, so his agency issued even more guidelines that further restricted how much wastewater drillers could inject undergroun­d.

“There’s still a lot of concern in Oklahoma,” Petersen said. “You can have additional larger earthquake­s that could affect that area.”

There are a couple other areas of elevated risk from man-made earthquake­s in the 2017 forecast, but they are not as high as in Oklahoma. They are patches in western Texas and along the New Mexico-Colorado border. But several other areas of elevated shaking risk in the past were dropped from this year’s outlook because of new regulation, including the Dallas-Fort Worth area, Petersen said.

“That’s a wonderful thing that we’ve been able to make progress,” Petersen said.

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