Current:Home > NewsEven in California, Oil Drilling Waste May Be Spurring Earthquakes -ApexWealth
Even in California, Oil Drilling Waste May Be Spurring Earthquakes
Burley Garcia View
Date:2025-04-10 09:08:48
A new study suggests a series of moderate earthquakes that shook California’s oil hub in September 2005 was linked to the nearby injection of waste from the drilling process deep underground.
Until now, California was largely ignored by scientific investigations targeting the connection between oil and gas activity and earthquakes. Instead, scientists have focused on states that historically did not have much earthquake activity before their respective oil and gas industries took off, such as Oklahoma and Texas.
Oklahoma’s jarring rise in earthquakes started in 2009, when the state’s oil production boom began. But earthquakes aren’t new to California, home to the major San Andreas Fault, as well as thousands of smaller faults. California was the top state for earthquakes before Oklahoma snagged the title in 2014.
All the natural shaking activity in California “makes it hard to see” possible man-made earthquakes, said Thomas Göebel, a geologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Göebel is the lead author of the study published last week in the journal Geophysical Research Letters. Although the study did not draw any definitive conclusions, it began to correlate earthquake activity with oil production.
Göebel and his colleagues focused their research on a corner of Kern County in southern California, the state’s hotspot of oil production and related waste injection. The scientists collected data on the region’s earthquake activity and injection rates for the three major nearby waste wells from 2001-2014, when California’s underground waste disposal operations expanded dramatically.
Using a statistical analysis, the scientists identified only one potential sequence of man-made earthquakes. It followed a new waste injection well going online in Kern County in May 2005. Operations there scaled up quickly, from the processing of 130,000 barrels of waste in May to the disposal of more than 360,000 barrels of waste in August.
As the waste volumes went up that year, so did the area’s earthquake activity. On September 22, 2005, a magnitude 4.5 event struck less than 10 kilometers away from the well along the White Wolf Fault. Later that day, two more earthquakes with magnitudes greater than 4.0 struck the same area. No major damage was reported.
Did that waste well’s activity trigger the earthquakes? Göebel said it’s possible, noting that his team’s analysis found a strong correlation between the waste injection rate and seismicity. He said additional modeling paints a picture of how it could have played out, with the high levels of injected waste spreading out along deep underground cracks, altering the surrounding rock formation’s pressure and ultimately causing the White Wolf Fault to slip and trigger earthquakes.
“It’s a pretty plausible interpretation,” Jeremy Boak, a geologist at the Oklahoma Geological Survey, told InsideClimate News. “The quantities of [waste] water are large enough to be significant” and “certainly capable” of inducing an earthquake, Boak told InsideClimate News.
Last year, researchers looking at seismicity across the central and eastern part of the nation found that wells that disposed of more than 300,000 barrels of waste a month were 1.5 times more likely to be linked to earthquakes than wells with lower waste disposal levels.
In the new study, Göebel and his colleagues noted that the well’s waste levels dropped dramatically in the months following the earthquakes. Such high waste disposal levels only occurred at that well site again for a few months in 2009; no earthquakes were observed then.
“California’s a pretty complicated area” in its geology, said George Choy from the United States Geological Survey. These researchers have “raised the possibility” of a man-made earthquake swarm, Choy said, but he emphasized that more research is needed to draw any conclusions.
California is the third largest oil-producing state, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
There are currently no rules in California requiring operators to monitor the seismic activity at liquid waste injection wells, according to Don Drysdale, a spokesman for the California Department of Conservation.
State regulators have commissioned the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory to study the potential for wastewater injection to trigger earthquakes in California oilfields; the study results are due in December, according to Drysdale.
veryGood! (878)
Related
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- The Largest Arctic Science Expedition in History Finds Itself on Increasingly Thin Ice
- Fossil Fuel Emissions Push Greenhouse Gas Indicators to Record High in May
- Pregnant Serena Williams Shares Hilariously Relatable Message About Her Growing Baby Bump
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- American Climate Video: When a School Gym Becomes a Relief Center
- Life on an Urban Oil Field
- Kylie Jenner Officially Kicks Off Summer With 3 White Hot Looks
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Transcript: David Martin and John Sullivan on Face the Nation, June 25, 2023
Ranking
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Video: Dreamer who Conceived of the Largest Arctic Science Expedition in History Now Racing to Save it
- No Matter Who Wins, the US Exits the Paris Climate Accord the Day After the Election
- OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush talks Titan sub's design, carbon fiber hull, safety and more in 2022 interviews
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Western Colorado Water Purchases Stir Up Worries About The Future Of Farming
- Khloe Kardashian Captures Adorable Sibling Moment Between True and Tatum Thompson
- How to start swimming as an adult
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Ryan Reynolds is part of investment group taking stake in Alpine Formula 1 team
Elizabeth Holmes Begins 11-Year Prison Sentence in Theranos Fraud Case
Katrina Sparks a Revolution in Green Modular Housing
The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
Succession's Sarah Snook Gives Birth, Welcomes Baby With Husband Dave Lawson
Arizona governor approves over-the-counter contraceptive medications at pharmacies
America’s First Offshore Wind Energy Makes Landfall in Rhode Island