Google – AFP, Daniel Bosque (AFP), 2 October 2013
![]() |
A platform,
part of the Castor Project, located in the Ebro Delta off the
coast of Alcanar,
stands at sea on October 2, 2013 (AFP, Lluis Gene)
|
Madrid —
Hundreds of small earthquakes which have rattled Spain's eastern coast were
blamed Wednesday by green groups and geologists on a large offshore gas storage
plant that started operating in June.
More than
300 earthquakes have struck the Gulf of Valencia, a zone not normally known for
seismic activity, over the past month, according to Spain's National Geographic
Institute.
The
strongest, a 4.2 magnitude earthquake, hit in the early hours of Tuesday. It
did not cause any damage but frightened residents.
Inmaculada
Ramirez, a shop owner in the coastal town of Vinaros which faces the offshore
gas storage plant, said she was woken up by the earthquake.
"The
windows shook as if a train was flying overhead or a very long train was
passing by," the 55-year-old told AFP by telephone.
Ten
earthquakes with a magnitude between 1.4 and 2.9 were registered on Wednesday.
The wave of
earthquakes prompted the government to halt an injection of gas into a giant
offshore storage plant on September 16 in the Gulf of Valencia, while
scientists study whether they triggered the tremors.
The Castor
storage plant aims to store gas in a depleted oil reservoir 1.7 kilometres
(1.05 miles) under the Mediterranean Sea and send it via a pipeline to Spain's
national grid.
The plant,
owned and operated by Spanish firm Escal UGS, can hold up to 1.3 billion cubic
metres of gas, enough to meet the needs for the region of Valencia for three
months.
About 100
million cubic metres were injected into the plant, which opened in June, before
the government suspended its activity.
The
government argues there is no confirmed link between the earthquakes and the
work on the plant, but environmentalists strongly disagree.
"There
is no doubt over the link between the injection of gas in the reservoir of the
Castor project and the earthquakes," Spanish environmental group
Ecologists in Action said in a statement.
The plant
is located near a fault line but the region has very little seismic activity,
according to the president of Spain's College of Geologists, Luis Suarez.
"There
are rational indications to think that the earthquakes are linked to the
injection of gas in the Castor project," he said.
"The
fact is that in the area of the fault line there exists accumulated energy
that, pushed by the gas injections, ends up being released," he added.
"It is
very unlikely that there will be earthquakes of a stronger magnitude,"
Suarez said.
Three other
underground gas storage plants exists in Spain -- in Huesca at the foot of the
Pyrenees Mountains, in Guadalajara in the centre and in Bermeo in the northern
Basque Country. No seismic activity has been recorded near those plants.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.