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Ohio Earthquakes Caused By Drilling Wastewater Well, Expert Says

By THOMAS J. SHEERAN   01/ 2/12 09:33 PM ET   AP

CLEVELAND -- A northeast Ohio well used to dispose of wastewater from oil and gas drilling almost certainly caused a series of 11 minor quakes in the Youngstown area since last spring, a seismologist investigating the quakes said Monday.

Research is continuing on the now-shuttered injection well at Youngstown and seismic activity, but it might take a year for the wastewater-related rumblings in the earth to dissipate, said John Armbruster of Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in Palisades, N.Y.

Brine wastewater dumped in wells comes from drilling operations, including the so-called fracking process to extract gas from underground shale that has been a source of concern among environmental groups and some property owners. Injection wells have also been suspected in quakes in Ashtabula in far northeast Ohio, and in Arkansas, Colorado, and Oklahoma, Armbruster said.

Thousands of gallons of brine were injected daily into the Youngstown well that opened in 2010 until its owner, Northstar Disposal Services LLC, agreed Friday to stop injecting the waste into the earth as a precaution while authorities assessed any potential links to the quakes.

After the latest and largest quake Saturday at 4.0 magnitude, state officials announced their beliefs that injecting wastewater near a fault line had created enough pressure to cause seismic activity. They said four inactive wells within a five-mile radius of the Youngstown well would remain closed. But they also stressed that injection wells are different from drilling wells that employ fracking.

Armbruster said Monday he expects more quakes will occur despite the shutdown of the Youngstown well.

"The earthquakes will trickle on as a kind of a cascading process once you've caused them to occur," he said. "This one year of pumping is a pulse that has been pushed into the ground, and it's going to be spreading out for at least a year."

The quakes began last March with the most recent on Christmas Eve and New Year's Eve each occurring within 100 meters of the injection well. The Saturday quake in McDonald, outside of Youngstown, caused no serious injuries or property damage.

Youngstown Democrat Rep. Robert Hagan on Monday renewed his call for a moratorium on fracking and well injection disposal to allow a review of safety issues.

"If it's safe, I want to do it," he said in a telephone interview. "If it's not, I don't want to be part and parcel to destruction of the environment and the fake promise of jobs."

He said a moratorium "really is what we should be doing, mostly toward the injection wells, but we should be asking questions on drilling itself."

A spokesman for Gov. John Kasich, an outspoken supporter of the growing oil and natural gas industry in Ohio, said the shale industry shouldn't be punished for a fracking byproduct.

"That would be the equivalent of shutting down the auto industry because a scrap tire dump caught fire somewhere," said Kasich spokesman Rob Nichols.

He said 177 deep injection wells have operated without incident in Ohio for decades and the Youngstown well was closed within 24 hours of a study detailing how close a Christmas Eve quake was to the well.

The industry-supported Ohio Oil and Gas Association said the rash of quakes was "a rare and isolated event that should not cast doubt about the effectiveness" of injection wells.

Such wells "have been used safely and reliably as a disposal method for wastewater from oil and gas operations in the U.S. since the 1930s," the association's executive vice president, Thomas E. Stewart, said in a statement Monday.

Environmentalists are critical of the hydraulic fracturing process, called fracking, which utilizes chemical-laced water and sand to blast deep into the ground and free the shale gas. Critics fear the process itself or the drilling liquid, which can contain carcinogens, could contaminate water supplies, either below ground, by spills, or in disposed wastewater.

Permits allowing hydraulic fracturing in Ohio's portion of the Marcellus and the deeper Utica Shale formations rose from one in 2006 to at least 32 in 2011.

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CLEVELAND -- A northeast Ohio well used to dispose of wastewater from oil and gas drilling almost certainly caused a series of 11 minor quakes in the Youngstown area since last spring, a seismologist ...
CLEVELAND -- A northeast Ohio well used to dispose of wastewater from oil and gas drilling almost certainly caused a series of 11 minor quakes in the Youngstown area since last spring, a seismologist ...
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01:01 PM on 01/08/2012
We should just use renewable energy and nobody would use any of these methodts of oil and natural gas production. Problem solved.
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
07:33 AM on 01/06/2012
It appears to me that the only technique that geologist have to show where hidden earthquake fault lines are is to build a toxic wastewater injection well over the area in question and wait to see if it causes a 9.0 quake. The only way that they have to tell if toxic water is moving into drinking water aquifers above is to use radioactive tracers, but what if an earthquake opens a rift leading to a drinking water reservoir years after the fact when the toxic injection well is plugged? The Earth is a dynamic system, not a static system.
athiesttoo
reorganization: creating an illusion of progress
08:18 AM on 01/06/2012
It is sad but unfortunatley it will probably take a mass casualty event to wake folks up to the bill of goods they are being sold by the oil and gas companies.
05:07 PM on 01/11/2012
"hidden earthquake fault line"? really cosmicfart? Please stop making things up it just confuses the masses. If you knew anything about geology you would instantly question whether this is fault related in the first place. The closest fault is miles away and there is no way the throw on that fault is that large where it extends all the way over to said well.
Since I am an educated geologist with more than a bachelors degree, the more reasonable explanation is that these baby faults are probably caused by dissolution since they are pumping so much brine down this well and the amount of pressure just dissolves areas below causing a karst type situation. Go read up on it and please educate yourself before you regurgitate nonsense.
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
05:36 PM on 01/11/2012
It's the Ohio Officials who stated that brine wastwater was injected over a "fault line" not me. I just repeating what their geologist told them. Why don't you take this up with them. And they said that they really never know if there is a "hidden fault line" in a given place. That's all that talk about is "hidden fault lines". You must be right and all their geologist must be wrong them. Oh, wow!

Ohio Earthquakes Caused By Drilling Wastewater Well, Expert Says
www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/02/ohio-earthquakes-caused-by-wastewater-wel...

Jan 2, 2012 ... Controversy Over Shale Gas Fracking Galvanizes Communities In The ..... We never really know if there's a hidden fault line in a given place ...

Natural gas “fracking” just caused an earthquake in Ohio over ...
www.thomhartmann.com/forum/2012/01/natural-gas-%E2%80%9Cfracking%E2%80%9D-j...

... just so happens to be near an oil injection – or fracking site – in Youngstown. ... of gallons of wastewater into the ground alongside a fault line is responsible for ... is an earthquake not on a fault, science claims there was a 'hidden fault' there, ...
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Fred Bronson
America Unite
04:42 PM on 01/05/2012
I want every one who reads this to have an open mind. First get a see thru plastic bowl, fill it with water, then melt and pour a layer of wax any kind over the water about 1/4" thick, to create what appears to be land. Now put say 4 lbs. Of weight on the wax the water tight to the wax will make it strong enough to hold it. Now drill a hole in the bottom of the bowl as the water leaks out the wax will lose it's support, and the weight should break through. Now think what's happening with every gallon of oil we remove from the earth, I believe that's one reason why we are starting to have more and more earth quacks in areas that have never had them before, and yes there may be a big one coming ?????
Fred Bronson NC
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
03:30 AM on 01/06/2012
Also, any toxic liquid injected deep underground is ultimately exposed to enormous pressure that forces it up to the surface should rifts occur in the rock strata above it. I noticed how much pressure was pushing the oil out of the ground during the BP disaster. Do we really want our injected toxic wastewater to surface someday into our fresh water reservoirs? Right now the Gulf of Mexico is naturally leaking petroleum all over the place, always has! A solid rock strata does not hold liquid in forever.
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
01:59 AM on 01/05/2012
It's the earthquakes that cause rifts not the toxic wastewater injection wells. I'm not saying that toxic injection wells cause four mile rifts between injection well reservoirs and fresh water ground water reservoirs. It's the earthquakes themselves that have a propensity to cause such rifts. Toxic wastewater reservoirs should not be placed in areas of the United States were there are earthquakes. It also seems that wastewater injection wells trigger earthquakes when placed over earthquake fault lines. There are thousands of earthquakes in the United States every year so the probability of this occurring from place to place is rather high within the area of any of the 500,000 toxic wastewater injection wells in the United States. In the long run our frest water is much more valuable than the non-renewable energy that we extract from them. Fresh water is an industrail resource without which industry can not survive in the long term. They are destroying future business developments and farming in these areas by destroying their local water supplies.
07:19 PM on 01/04/2012
Here in Pa we have a frackin orgy goin on! The gov.,Corebit, has sold his soul to the gasman who pays no tax for his bounty.The residents pay for the infrastructure like roads police,etc. .What do we get for our investment? Polluted water, pools of toxic brine, increased taxes/decreased services,poisoned cattle and wildlife.Now a gas main is being made to pipe the gas to Texas,which it seems we have the opportunity to pay for as well.Corebit is predictibly publican-'no welfare but corporate welfare'
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12:54 PM on 01/04/2012
This has been happening all over the world, and more widespread attention needs to be paid to the phenomenon. As usual, we're creating our own version of hell. See http://thepoliticali.blogspot.com/2011/11/oklahoma-all-shook-up.html
Wib
Liberal former Marine who loves fly fishing and is
12:43 PM on 01/04/2012
If injecting waste water in a disposal well can cause an earthquake, certainly fracking can do the same. I personally fear that at some time we are going to have a major quake caused by fracking, and I fear that the poisoning of groundwater from the process is already taking place and will soon cause major problems in areas where fracking takes place. I suspect that at some time in the not too distant future we will have virtual deserts caused by fracking because there will be no potable water that doesn't have to be piped in from too far away to make it economically viable. Of course the industry that causes the problems will never admit fault or be required to pay restitution or to seek ways to reverse the problems. We really need to get money out of politics to make these people sit up and take notice. When they can't buy politicians, they are more likely to be held responsible and their liabilities will come home to roost on their heads.
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
12:35 PM on 01/04/2012
There must be dangerous chemicals in fracking wastewater cuz if it was just hydrocarbons and saltwater all we'd need to do is separate the hydrocarbons from the water and then throw the rest of it into the salty ocean, no injection wells necessary. Using salt water loaded with benzene to fill in voids in the earth left by fracking is a dangerous thing to do since a four mile rift caused by an earthquake could transport the cancer causing benzene to the surface ground water. Someday all that toxic stuff will surface.
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Greatest Darthfruit
So, you the brains of this outfit, or is he?
12:26 PM on 01/04/2012
See? This is what I've been saying since those small quakes started in Arkansas, WV, NY; its this damn fracking again and again!!! And they won't stop until they pollute all of the U.S.
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personal beliefs
Things never go according to plan, so plan accordi
12:40 PM on 01/04/2012
the fraccing isn't causing it.
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Greatest Darthfruit
So, you the brains of this outfit, or is he?
02:06 PM on 01/04/2012
OMG!! I recommend reading a little more about this spreading serious issue, start with Josh Fox´s "Gasland"
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
09:58 AM on 01/05/2012
Both toxic wastewater injection and fracking are the same process. The latest seismic data to come in about the 4.0 quake near Youngstown, Ohio indicate the quake originated two miles below the surface. Since the injection well was 9000 ft deep or about two miles the circumstantial evidence strongly points to the injection well as the cause of this quake. More after shocks are predicted over the next year or so. Duck and cover!
03:44 AM on 01/04/2012
So Kasich can't tell the difference between a contained fire and widespread earthquakes. MOVE THE MANSION TO THE TOP OF A FRACK FIELD. Why not frack on any property he owns personally?. Is Kasich so incredibly dumb, or arrogant,or corrupted, or all three?
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
09:57 PM on 01/03/2012
By the time the Scientific Method proved to the satisfaction of the courts that asbestos and cigarettes where harmful, millions of people were killed and injured by these toxins. The asbestos and cigarette political lobby prevented Science from doing its job in a timely way so that profits could be made. Geology isn't an exact science such as Chemistry. It's impossible to repeat most geological events on demand, and so it's anyone's guess what's really going on under the earth most of the time. We never really know if there's a hidden fault line in a given place until we feel it cuz we have triggered it, and by the time we feel it it's too late to undue the damage that we have triggered. Frackers walk blindly into the geological unknown to the detriment of the general population.
08:19 AM on 01/04/2012
I agree, If we would spend the time we use fighting among ourselves to find solutions like requiring the oil and gas industry to put up water treatment plants for the frac water. look..more jobs and find another solution to injection either way it doesnt take a geni to figure out if you remove things or inject things no matter how carefully done its just a JENGA game with the earth we all live on!
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Jame Gumb
It rubs the lotion on its skin
08:58 AM on 01/04/2012
2 words: Luminiferous aether
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
02:19 AM on 01/05/2012
I9 words: Luminiferous profit at the expense of American fresh water resources upon which farming and industry depend for their survival.
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LeaderofMen
Bilingual former US Marine.
07:08 PM on 01/03/2012
It's amusing that those companies doing the fracking continue to deny any and all responsibility for their actions.

And without exception, you won't find a single Republican who thinks the EPA is worth a hill of beans - especially in Ohio.

Ohioans get the government they deserve.
Wib
Liberal former Marine who loves fly fishing and is
12:45 PM on 01/04/2012
It's not amusing, its frightening and they won't be required to accept responsibility or, more importantly, liability as long as they can buy politicians.
05:47 PM on 01/03/2012
What folks are missing is that the brine that is being injected is from other drilling sites in Pennsylvania, trucked into Youngstown for disposal and is being put into the ground where it did not from in the first place. It's obvious that the geology of the current Youngstown well near a fault line is intolerable to the introduction of foreign matter being injected into the area.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
personal beliefs
Things never go according to plan, so plan accordi
05:14 PM on 01/03/2012
eh, this guy is just guessing...
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
02:28 AM on 01/05/2012
It's the wastewater injection and fracking geologist who are doing the guessing about the dynamic nature of Earth's geological activity. Guess wrong and they destroy most of America's fresh water supplies upon which industry and farming depend for their survival. "Good-by American pie!"
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lambdin1
What's this?
11:51 AM on 01/05/2012
Just like the oil and gas company's "experts" said fracking would be OK! Has anyone noticed that it is always the "experts" that get us (the public) into trouble. " OOPS! Don't pay any attention to a little ground shaking. After all we need more profit!"
05:10 PM on 01/03/2012
so concluded by the government paid officials per the over eager environmentalists
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
02:53 AM on 01/05/2012
And just who is it whom you'd like to draw the correct conclusions within the controversial science of toxic injection and fracking Geology. Geologist seem to have different conclusions depending upon where their research money is coming from. Money trumps Science within our civilization. It also did so for a long time in the case of silicon implants, asbestos, and cigarettes.