The Mercury News

Oklahoma quakes tied to fracking waste

- By TimTalley

OKLAHOMA CITY — The Oklahoma Geological Survey said Tuesday it is “very likely” that most of the state’s recent earthquake­s were triggered by the subsurface injection of wastewater from oil and natural gas drilling operations.

Geologists have been studying the cause of hundreds of earthquake­s that have shaken the homes and the nerves of residents in central and north- central Oklahoma, where the pace of oil and gas drilling has accelerate­d in recent years.

A statement released by state geologist Richard D. Andrews and Austin Holland, state seismologi­st, said the rate of earthquake­s and geographic­al trends around major oil and gas drilling operations that produce large amounts of wastewater indicate the earthquake­s “are very unlikely to represent a naturally occurring process.”

The survey said the “primary suspected source” of the temblors is not hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, which is the practice of injecting fluid under high pressure to create cracks in deep- rock formations so natural gas and oil will flow more freely during drilling. It said the source is more likely the injection in disposal wells of wastewater produced as a byproduct of fracking.

“The OGS considers it very likely that the majority of recent earthquake­s, particular­ly those in central and north- central Oklahoma, are triggered by the injection of produced water in disposal wells,” the statement said.

Earthquake activity in Oklahoma in 2013 was 70 times greater than the rate of earthquake­s prior to 2008.

Geologists historical­ly recorded an average of 1.5 earthquake­s of magnitude 3 or greater each year. The state is now recording an average of 2.5 magnitude 3 or greater earthquake­s each day, according to geologists.

The statement is the survey’s strongest since it began looking into the source of the state’s earthquake swarm. In 2012, the survey said it was possible that some earthquake­s had been triggered by oil and gas operations but it was “unlikely that all of the earthquake­s can be attributed to human activities.”

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