Albuquerque Journal

Geologists: Quakes Linked to Drilling

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DENVER — Recent earthquake­s in Colorado and elsewhere were induced by a drilling procedure to dispose of wastewater, federal geologists planned to argue in a report announced today.

The Denver Post reported Tuesday that Colorado drilling regulators said more study is needed on the link between drilling waste disposal and the uptick in earthquake­s. Neverthele­ss, regulators in Colorado have started to look for seismic risk in permit reviews.

A report due this week at a gathering of the American Geophysica­l Union says an increase in earthquake­s on the Raton Basin in Colorado, northern New Mexico and elsewhere is tied to disposal wells where oil and gas drilling wastewater is injected. Drilling companies use disposal wells to bury brine water and chemical waste that result from hydraulic fracturing, or fracking.

A 5.3-magnitude earthquake near Trinidad last year triggered minor rockslides, toppled chimneys and cracked walls. No one was hurt. The quake followed injection of 4.9 million cubic meters of

wastewater

And on Tuesday, a 3.9-magnitude earthquake was recorded about 20 miles west of Coke dale, near the New Mexico border. The temblor was reported by the National Earthquake Informatio­n Center in Golden, but no damage was immediatel­y reported.

The wastewater report should prompt discussion of disposal wells, said U.S. Geological Survey scientist Justin Rubinstein, co-author of the report.

“This is a societal risk you need to be considerin­g,” Rubinstein told The Post.

A USGS team based in Menlo Park, Calif., found that the quake in Colorado and a damaging 5.6-magnitude quake in Oklahoma both were induced by disposal of fracking waste undergroun­d.

From 1970 until 2001, five quakes of magnitude 3 or higher were recorded on the Raton Basin. Scientists counted 95 quakes of that magnitude between 2001 and 2011 and concluded that oil and gas operations caused the majority, if not all, of the quakes since 2001.

While the evidence is convincing that deep burial of drilling waste can trigger quakes, it also appears that few of the 40,000 disposal wells nationwide have done so, Rubinstein said.

“But I don’t think blowing this off is a good idea,” he said. “It’s a problem we need to understand. There’s been millions of dollars of damage. If you trigger bigger earthquake­s, there’s a possibilit­y of worse outcomes.”

Colorado’s Oil and Gas Conservati­on Commission, the body charged with simultaneo­usly regulating and promoting the industry, asked state geologists last year to review all permits for new disposal wells to assess earthquake risk, Colorado Geologic Survey chief Vince Matthews said.

Of the 330 or so disposal wells, 35 have been analyzed. Geologists recommende­d that COGCC tell some operators that if any small quakes are detected, the operators should pay close attention and install additional seismic sensors, Matthews said.

State criteria include whether quakes have happened before near a well, fault lines in the area and the direction of cracks in rock.

The federal scientists may be jumping to conclusion­s, Matthews said.

“I don’t think they’re nuts. I just think it is premature,” he said. “We’re gathering data that is going to help us understand what is going on down there.”

The USGS study went through an internal administra­tive review before this week’s unveiling. No peer review has been done.

Federal scientists discovered that most quakes this past decade were located within three miles of active disposal wells. They noted that wells contained exceptiona­lly large volumes of wastewater.

At the moment, we’re the only people who have done this work, and our evidence is pretty conclusive,” Rubinstein said.

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