Page added on April 9, 2012
Oil and gas production may explain a sharp increase in small earthquakes in the nation’s midsection, a new study from the U.S. Geological Survey suggests.
The rate has jumped sixfold from the late 20th century through last year, the team reports, and the changes are “almost certainly man-made.”
Outside experts were split in their opinions about the report, which is not yet published but is due to be presented at a meeting later this month.
The study said a relatively mild increase starting in 2001 comes from increased quake activity in a methane production area along the state line between Colorado and New Mexico. The increase began about the time that methane production began there, so there’s a “clear possibility” of a link, says lead author William Ellsworth of the USGS.
The increase over the nation’s midsection has gotten steeper since 2009, due to more quakes in a variety of oil and gas production areas, including some in Arkansas and Oklahoma, the researchers say.
Fracking at fault? Probably not
It’s not clear how the earthquake rates might be related to oil and gas production, the study authors said. They note that others have linked earthquakes to injecting huge amounts of leftover wastewater deep into the earth.
There has been concern about potential earthquakes from a smaller-scale injection of fluids during a process known as hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, which is used to recover gas. But Ellsworth said Friday he is confident that fracking is not responsible for the earthquake trends his study found, based on prior studies.
The study covers a swath of the United States that lies roughly west of Ohio and east of Utah. It counted earthquakes of magnitude 3 and above.
Magnitude-3 quakes are mild, and may be felt by only a few people in the upper floors of buildings, or may cause parked cars to rock slightly. The biggest counted in the study was a magnitude-5.6 quake that hit Oklahoma last Nov. 5, damaging dozens of homes. Experts said it was too strong to be linked to oil and gas production.
The researchers reported that from 1970 to 2000, the region they studied averaged about 21 quakes a year. That rose to about 29 a year for 2001 through 2008, they wrote, and the three following years produced totals of 50, 87 and 134, respectively.
‘We’ve seen this’ in the West as well
The study results make sense and are probably due to human-made stress in the ground, said Rowena Lohman, a Cornell University geophysicist.
“The key thing to remember is, magnitude-3’s are really small,” Lohman said. “We’ve seen this sort of behavior in the western United States for a long time.”
Usually, it’s with geothermal energy, dams or prospecting. With magnitude-4 quakes, a person standing on top of them would at most feel like a sharp jolt, but mostly don’t last long enough to be a problem for buildings, she said.
The idea is to understand how the human-made activity triggers quakes, she said. One possibility is that the injected fluids change the friction and stickiness of minerals on fault lines. Another concept is that they change the below-surface pressure because the fluid is trapped and builds, and then “sets off something that’s about ready to go anyway,” Lohman said.
But another expert was not convinced of a link to oil and gas operations.
Austin Holland, the Oklahoma state seismologist, said the new work presents an “interesting hypothesis” but that the increase in earthquake rates could simply be the result of natural processes.
Holland said clusters of quakes can occur naturally, and that scientists do not yet fully understand the natural cycles of seismic activity in the central United States. Comprehensive earthquake records for the region go back only a few decades, he said, while natural cycles stretch for tens of thousands of years. So too little is known to rule out natural processes for causing the increase, he said.
6 Comments on "Study ties oil and gas production to Midwest quake"
BillT on Mon, 9th Apr 2012 3:05 am
Cover up by the petroleum industry’s propaganda machine. Eventually, they will happen more and more and bigger and bigger. After all, some of the biggest faults are in the Mississippi valley area and who knows what will lubricate it sufficiently?
Ham on Mon, 9th Apr 2012 11:55 am
Probably not? We put 600 chemicals underground including those that are toxic after a mini explosion and nothing happens? If we emit billions of tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere does that mean nothing happens too? Cause and effect is nothing to worry about. Just a minor rumble, won’t matter. Tomorrow the Gods will bring us more cargo, for it they that delivered it in the first place.
SOS on Mon, 9th Apr 2012 2:11 pm
The propaganda machine is at full tilt boogie with this article.
BillT on Mon, 9th Apr 2012 2:52 pm
MSNBC is owned by Microsoft and GE. You really don’t expect to get real news from two mega corporations that are heavy into the Military/Security Industrial Complex, do you?
How about:
GE Technology Infrastructure
GE Aviation
GE Healthcare
GE Transportation
GE Energy Services
GE Oil & Gas
GE Power
GE Water
And why would GE owned news outlets say anything negative that might affect one of these profit centers? Just askin’
Kenz300 on Mon, 9th Apr 2012 7:41 pm
Drilling in the Gulf was safe until BP had their disaster. Can the big oil and gas companies be believed? Wall Street was safe until they blew up the economy. Republicans always argue to eliminate regulation. We need sensible regulation to keep companies like BP and Wall Street from destroying the country for their greed.
pete on Tue, 10th Apr 2012 2:26 am
Odd little piece of info here search:
Nikola tesla earthquake machine
separate and then with Mythbusters added at the end. Stream the show, if you can, and watch it. The guys succeed in their first test then they, either consciously or sub, tank the next two on purpose?
Give me the biggest fracking machine and a 1 mile deep well on the pacific coast fault line and STAND BACK AND WATCH THE WEST COAST ROLL INTO THE OCEAN! No Problem.