Fracturing/pressure pumping

Oklahoma Toughens Hydraulic Fracturing Rules After Earthquakes

Oklahoma is tightening its rules for hydraulic fracturing after studying a new cluster of earthquakes in one of the hottest US regions for drilling.

rig.jpg
An oil rig stands behind a home in Oklahoma City.
Credit: J. Pat Carter/Getty Images.

Oklahoma is tightening its rules for hydraulic fracturing after studying a new cluster of earthquakes in one of the hottest US regions for drilling.

The Oklahoma Corporation Commission announced that all explorers within certain areas must use equipment known as a seismic array, which detects movement underground. The regulators also lowered the quake threshold for pausing work from 3.0 magnitude to 2.5, a level where humans can feel the earth move. The mandated delay is for at least 6 hours.

Hydraulic fracturing loosens hydrocarbons from shale by blasting water, sand, and chemicals underground. Since December 2016, Oklahoma officials have counted 74 earthquakes of at least 2.5 magnitude that may be linked to hydraulic fracturing, said Matt Skinner, a commission spokesman, in an email last month.

"While more study needs to be done, the indications are that those operators who have their own seismic arrays and took actions when there were seismic events too small to be felt decreased the risk of having multiple, stronger earthquakes,” said Tim Baker, director of the commission’s oil and gas conservation unit.

The new rules are designed to slow quakes in the so-called SCOOP and STACK shale plays, where wastewater disposal, long thought to be the main culprit for larger, more-prevalent tremors in the northern half of the state, isn’t as much of an issue. That opens up the idea that fracturing itself may be to blame.

Read the full story here.