Google – AFP, 4 November 2013
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A drum
seismograph records the shaking of the ground at the new earthquake
monitoring
station 23 June 2004 at the Museum of Natural History in New York
City (Getty
Images/AFP/File, Spencer Platt)
|
Washington
— A method of storing harmful greenhouse gases by injecting them below ground
has likely triggered a series of earthquakes in Texas, some larger than
magnitude 3, a US study said Monday.
The
findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences mark the first
time that carbon storage has been linked to temblors ranging from 3.0 to 4.4 in
severity.
Researchers
warned last year in the same journal that carbon capture and storage risked
causing earthquakes, but there had been no direct evidence of such quakes until
now.
The study
focused on seismic activity in petroleum fields in Scurry and Kent Counties in
northwest Texas, known as the Cogdell and Kelly-Snyder oil fields.
A process
called water flooding was used in the Cogdell field to boost oil production
from 1957 to 1982, and previous research has found that the practice caused
small quakes in the area from 1975 to 1982.
More
recently, methane and CO2 have been injected into the oil field at high
volumes, said the research by Wei Gan and Cliff Frohlich at The University of
Texas at Austin's Institute for Geophysics.
It was done
in an area where the US Department of Energy has funded research on the
potential impacts of carbon capture and storage (CCS), a proposed technique for
reducing greenhouse gas emissions by capturing CO2 and injecting it deep
underground for long-term storage.
"The
most significant result of this investigation is that gas injection may have contributed
to triggering a sequence of earthquakes occurring since 2006 in and near the
Cogdell field in Texas," said the study.
"This
is an unusual and noteworthy instance where gas injection may have contributed
to triggering earthquakes having magnitudes of 3 or larger."
There were
18 earthquakes of magnitude 3 or higher from 2006-2012, including a 4.4
earthquake on September 11, 2011.
Of 93
quakes in the Cogdell area from March 2009 to December 2010, three during that
time period were greater than magnitude 3.
Water
injection could not have explained these quakes, which came after a period of
24 years in which no earthquakes were detected, the researchers said.
The study
was funded by the US Geological Survey and the National Natural Science
Foundation of China.
The study
said it remains "puzzling why there are no earthquakes in similar nearby
fields such as the Kelly?Snyder field and the Salt Creek field."
Like the
Cogdell field, those other areas have undergone years of sustained injection of
water and extraction of oil, followed by recent increases in gas injection.
The study
authors said it could be that there are geological faults in the Cogdell area
that susceptible to activity under pressure, and that such faults may not exist
in the nearby fields.
More
detailed geological models are needed to further explain why some areas respond
differently to gas injection than others.
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