Wastewater disposal method may limit earthquakes caused by fracking by Brooks Hays Washington DC (UPI) Jul 28, 2021 Oil and gas companies can prevent earthquakes by reducing the rate of wastewater injections, according to a new study. To extract oil and gas trapped deep in rock deposits, fossil fuel companies use hydraulic fracturing, or the the injection of high-pressure fluids deep into Earth's crust. Because these injection fluids are filled with toxic chemicals, the resulting wastewater must be disposed of safely. Most operations blast the dirty water deep underground at old injection sites, but numerous studies -- from Middle America and Appalachia to Sichuan, China -- have linked the practice with increases in regional earthquakes. For the latest study, published Wednesday in the journal Nature, scientists combined field studies and geological models to predict the impacts of wastewater injection on local faults systems. Scientists began by studying the effects of wastewater injections across the Val d'Agri oil field in southern Italy, the largest onshore oil field in western Europe. The injections triggered hundreds of small earthquakes. "The earthquakes were detected within hours of injection," study co-author James Dietrich said in a press release. "The cause and effect relationship was clear," said Dietrich, distinguished professor emeritus of geophysics at the University of California, Riverside. Using seismic data and records of wastewater injection activity, researchers built a model to predict the effects of injections on local fault systems. Using the model, scientists were able to accurately reproduce seismic events recorded between 1993 and 2016. Both the model and lab experiments helped Dietrich and his research partners demonstrate the knock-on effects of small shifts in fault pressure caused by wastewater injections. After demonstrating the accuracy of their new model using historical data, scientists simulated the effects of different wastewater injection rates on the rate of earthquakes across the Val d'Agri oil field. The analysis showed a lower injection rate was both sustainable and did not induce earthquakes. The model's predictions were confirmed in field tests, where the lower injection rate was credited with reduced seismic activity across the Val d'Agri. In order to combat climate change, most policy makers agree that fossil fuel extraction must be phased out in favor of green energy. But that won't necessarily spell the end of wastewater injections and human-caused earthquakes -- many carbon capture technologies sequester carbon dioxide by injecting it deep underground. "One of the big impediments to this is that gigantic volumes of fluids injected into the ground will probably trigger earthquakes," Dieterich said. "How can that be managed? We've learned a little here that may help along those lines, and for related problems like fracking."
Key factors for estimating costs to plug abandoned oil and gas wells Washington DC (SPX) Jul 28, 2021 In an analysis of over 19,500 orphaned oil and gas wells across the United States, scholars at Resources for the Future (RFF) find that the median cost of plugging and reclaiming a well is $76,000, although that figure can vary widely depending on the age, location, well depth, and other key factors. The paper was published earlier this month in the peer-reviewed journal Environmental Science and Technology. To the research team's knowledge, the orphaned oil and gas wells analyzed represent the la ... read more
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