WASHINGTON (AP) — The controversial practice of hydraulic
fracturing to extract natural gas does not pose a high risk for
triggering earthquakes large enough to feel, but other types of
energy-related drilling can make the ground noticeably shake, a major
government science report concludes.
Even those man-made tremors
large enough to be an issue are very rare, says a special report by the
National Research Council. In more than 90 years of monitoring, human
activity has been shown to trigger only 154 quakes, most of them
moderate or small, and only 60 of them in the United States. That's
compared to a global average of about 14,450 earthquakes of magnitude
4.0 or greater every year, said the report, released Friday.
Most
of those are caused by gas and oil drilling the conventional way,
damming rivers, deep injections of wastewater and purposeful flooding.
Only two worldwide instances of shaking — a magnitude 2.8 tremor in
Oklahoma and a 2.3 magnitude shaking in England — can be attributed to
hydraulic fracturing, a specific method of extracting gas by injection
of fluids sometimes called "fracking," the report said. Both were last
year.
"There's a whole bunch of wells that have been drilled,
let's say for wastewater and the number of events have been pretty
small," said report chairman Murray Hitzman, a professor of economic
geology at the Colorado School of Mines. "Is it a huge problem? The
report says basically no. Is it something we should look at and think
about? Yes."
With increased drilling to satisfy the country's
thirst for energy, it is important to watch injection and other wells
better and consider potential repercussions before starting, the report
said. No one has been killed, nor has there been major damage, from
man-made quakes in the United States, said the report by the council,
which is part of the National Academy of Sciences, a private nonprofit
institution that provides expert advice to the government.
"There
is potential to produce significant seismic events that can be felt and
cause damage and public concern," the report said.
The research
council report shows that most of the tremors that can be blamed on
humans occurred in California, Texas, Colorado, Oklahoma, and Ohio.
California and Oklahoma had the biggest man-made shakes as byproducts of
conventional oil and gas drilling. Colorado has one of the most
documented cases of three 5.0 to 5.5 man-induced quakes because of an
injection well. Northern California also has 300 to 400 tiny quakes a
year since 2005 because of geothermal energy extraction.
Man-made
drilling — usually injections of fluids deep and at high pressure — can
trigger shaking because it changes the crucial balance of fluid into and
out of the subsurface. That can then affect the pore pressure of the
soil and that's what helps keep faults from moving, Hitzman said.
The
report makes sense as far as it goes, said U.S. Geological Survey
seismologist William Ellsworth, but since the research council started
its study, government geologists have noticed a strange increase in
earthquakes that seem man-made. At a professional seismology conference
in April, Ellsworth presented a USGS report on a six-fold increase in
man-made quakes. He pointed to induced quakes of magnitude 4 or larger
in the past year in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Colorado, New Mexico, and
Ohio, but said much of this happened too late for the research council
to include in its study.
Hitzman said it's still too early to tell whether those recent quakes would have changed the report's conclusions.
Another
study — also too recent for the research council report — says a 4.7
magnitude quake in central Arkansas in 2011 was man-made and scientists
are still looking at a 2011 quake in Oklahoma that measured 5.6 as a
potential but not proven induced tremor, Ellsworth said.
The
man-made quakes that Ellsworth has been seeing are almost all related to
wastewater injection, he said. Ellsworth said he agreed with the
research council that "hydraulic fracturing does not seem to pose much
risk for earthquake activity."
If the country starts capturing the global warming gas carbon
dioxide from coal power plants and injecting it underground, there is a
potential for a larger quakes given the amount of the heat-trapping gas
that would have to be buried, the council's report said. That's an
issue that needs more study, it said.
Congress and the Department of Energy requested the 240-page report.