CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“QUAKE
STUDIES COMPLICATE FRACKING QUESTIONS”
Bank
on this: As oil drilling companies begin ramping up for large numbers of
wells in the Saudi Arabian-sized Monterey Shale geologic formation, opponents
will paint some doomsday scenarios.
Here’s one they will likely conjure
up: Injection wells into which drillers put waste water and chemicals from
their operations will somehow set off the adjacent San Andreas Fault and cause
multiple earthquakes, possibly as strong as the 1906 San Francisco shock.
The drilling industry will downplay
any such risk, saying they’ve used hydraulic fracturing in California for decades
without producing quakes.
The issue of fracking and earthquakes
took on new currency in early July, when Science magazine, the
thoroughly peer-reviewed journal of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science, published two studies (http://www.earth.columbia.edu/articles/view/3107,
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/341/6142/117.summary).
One, from UC Santa Cruz, reported that as geothermal electricity production
rises in California’s Imperial Valley, so does the number of small earthquakes
in that ever-shaky area where more than 10,000 temblors have been recorded
since 1981.
The other, from a team of researchers
at Columbia University and the University of Oklahoma, found that fracking may
be one reason previously stable parts of the East and Midwest have experienced
some earthquakes in recent years.
The second study raises the most
questions for fracking in the Monterey Shale, which covers hundreds of square
miles from eastern Monterey County south along the west side of the San Joaquin
Valley and beyond.
“A recent dramatic increase in
seismicity in the midwestern United States may be related to increases in deep
wastewater injection,” said the Columbia/Oklahoma study.
As lead author Nicholas van der Elst
of Columbia explained it, quakes in previously quiescent areas from North
Dakota to Oklahoma and Pennsylvania are at least in part due to injection of
waste from fracking and other oil drilling – a combination of water and a
variety of chemicals – into separate wells near those producing oil.
The report said waste liquid -- used in fracking to break into shale
formations and get at the oil inside – can essentially lubricate small
underground faults, which then can be set off by seismic waves traveling
through the earth from large and very distant quakes. “Triggering in induced
seismic zones could be an indicator that fluid injection has brought the fault
system to a critical state,” the study said.
But van der Elst, who earned his Ph.D.
at UC Santa Cruz, noted in an interview that rock formations in the Monterey
Shale are different from most of those around oil wells elsewhere in America.
“Elsewhere, waste is rarely injected into shale, but often into sandstone below
where oil is found,” he said. So he stops far short of predicting that
injection wells for waste fluid in the Monterey Shale could trigger massive
earthquakes on or near the San Andreas.
He notes that none of the eastern and
midwestern quakes have done significant damage or killed anyone, saying “There
is not necessarily greater danger in the Monterey Shale.”
Meanwhile, Tupper Hull, spokesman for
the Western States Petroleum Assn., asserts that “There appears to be a
fundamental difference in conditions in the Midwest and here. The area here is
already saturated with water – oil production in California results in about 10
times more water coming up than oil. The water that comes up here is routinely
reinjected in nearby injection wells, without any increase in earthquakes.”
Hull, therefore, insists that “There
is no connection between fracking and earthquakes. Disposal of waste water in
California has been handled on a routine basis for many, many years, in
accordance with both state and federal laws.”
But that’s unlikely to satisfy either
seismic alarmists or environmentalists fretting about the possibility of ground
water pollution from fracking wastes.
So Hull says the industry expects
current discussions in the Legislature of a fracking moratorium or a flat-out
prohibition on fracking the Monterey Shale to produce “a more robust regulatory
climate.”
Van der Elst recommends not that
California stop or ban fracking, but that “there should be long-term seismic
monitoring of any long-term injection site. A lot of attention should be paid
to what eventually happens to the waste.”
All of which means there’s interesting
evidence building in this emerging controversy. And that will make decisions on
fracking even more complex.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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