Frac Waste Quakes Make Time Magazine: The U.S.’s New Earthquake Capital: Oklahoma. “Some seismologists say that even if all disposal activity stopped in the state immediately, there could be earthquakes for decades.”

2016 03 Okie frac waste quakes make Time Magazine

The U.S.’s New Earthquake Capital: Oklahoma by Josh Sanburn, March 14, 2016, Time Magazine

An attendee holds a protest sign at a public forum event hosted at the Univ. of Central Oklahoma, Edmond, OK

An attendee holds a protest sign at a public forum event hosted at the Univ. of Central Oklahoma, Edmond, OK

Earthquake damage at St. Francis of the Woods Spiritual Renewal Center, Coyle, OK

Earthquake damage at St. Francis of the Woods Spiritual Renewal Center, Coyle, OK

Earthquake damage at Jackie Dill’s home, Coyle, OK

Earthquake damage at Jackie Dill’s home, Coyle, OK

Disaster insurance table at a public forum event, Univ. of Central Oklahoma, Edmond, OK

Disaster insurance table at a public forum event, Univ. of Central Oklahoma, Edmond, OK

Cinder blocks left from demolition are piled in Crescent High School’s gymnasium. An earthquake on July 28, 2015 destabilized the gymnasium’s walls forcing the school to repair the entire structure, Crescent, OK

Cinder blocks left from demolition are piled in Crescent High School’s gymnasium. An earthquake on July 28, 2015 destabilized the gymnasium’s walls forcing the school to repair the entire structure, Crescent, OK

Photographer John Francis Peters captures how the ground is shifting—both seismically and politically—in Oklahoma

Oklahoma used to be a seismic afterthought, a place with so few earthquakes that in the 1990s it was one of three locations where the Soviets were allowed to monitor American nuclear testing. Today, however, Oklahoma is one of the most seismic places on the planet.

In 2015, the state had 907 earthquakes that were 3-magnitude or greater compared with just one in 2007. Scientists say the growth in seismicity is directly related to the oil and gas industry, specifically the use of disposal wells that reinject back into the earth salty wastewater that comes up naturally during drilling. An estimated 3 billion barrels of water came out of the ground in 2015, and its reinjection has increased pressure on the state’s fault lines, triggering hundreds of tremors in western and central Oklahoma.

2016 01 06 snap Oklahoma waste water disposal wells

Over the last few years, homes have been damaged, property values have fallen, and interest in quake insurance has risen. The state, meanwhile, has been slow to respond. Critics say officials are too reliant on the industry to take any meaningful steps that would put real pressure on the industry, especially at a time when the price of oil has fallen by 70% since 2014. Residents however, are taking action. Some are protesting. Some are suing. Others are even setting up seismographs on their own property to track the quakes themselves.

The state’s oil and gas regulatory agency—the Oklahoma Corporation Commission—says that disposal has decreased significantly in the last several months. But many Oklahomans are still concerned that a big one will hit a populated area like Oklahoma City. Of equal concern are the long-term consequences of disposing billions of barrels of water back underground.

Some seismologists say that even if all disposal activity stopped in the state immediately, there could be earthquakes for decades.

John Francis Peters is a photographer based in Los Angeles.

Caroline Smith, who edited this photo essay, is a special projects editor at TIME.

Josh Sanburn is a writer at TIME. [Emphasis added]

[Refer also to:

2015 09: Alberta frack operation near Devon shattered home window; No wonder Edmonton-area residents are protesting fracing near their homes

2015 09 17 Henry Neumann edmonton-alberta-what-the-frack-shattered home window

2016 01 12: Ernst vs AER Supreme Court of Canada hearing followed by 4.8M quake in AER’s Immoral Blanket Approval Frac Experiment Gone Wild, felt in St. Albert, 260km away ]

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