First, let’s take a look at an article written by Peter Hennings and Katie Smye, covering the “knowns, questions, and implications of induced seismicity in the Permian basin.”
History: Induced earthquakes associated with oil and gas production, oil-field water and carbon dioxide flooding for enhanced oil recovery, and wastewater disposal by injection in the Permian Basin date back to the 1960s.
The shale revolution in the region has accelerated these processes at unprecedented rates.
Earthquake clusters: An important observation is that as stress is built up on pre-existing faults, seismic events cluster, associated with earthquake-to-earthquake stress interaction and fault-to-fault activity interaction. This results in spatially and temporally distinct earthquake groupings.
By the numbers: The recent concern around induced seismicity comes mainly from wastewater injection into subsurface formations at multiple levels, thus reactivating basement-rooted faults with frequent and high-magnitude earthquakes.
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Since 2009, shale production has required disposal/injection of about 45 billion barrels of coproduced wastewater in the Permian basin.
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The petroleum industry now handles an estimated 15 million barrels per day of wastewater in the basin.
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Water injection has caused pre-existing faults to slip, producing more than 4,000 magnitude +3.0 earthquakes and 10 magnitude + 5.0 earthquakes as of October 2024.
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Induced seismicity on the most sensitive faults has occurred as distant as 40 kilometers from the deep injection site.
After effects: Wastewater injection in the Permian has caused:
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Reservoir pressurization
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Fault reactivation and high rates of induced earthquakes
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Uplift of the ground surface
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Threats to the surface environment
Monitoring: Earthquakes in the Permian Basin region are cataloged by the:
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Texas Seismological Network (TexNet)
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New Mexico Tech Seismological Observatory (NMTSO)
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U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)
Better data: With an increasing number of seismometers, uncertainty in depth of earthquake has reduced from 1.8 kilometers in 2017 to 1.0 kilometers in 2023, and uncertainty in XY coordinates decreased from 1.0 kilometer to 0.5 kilometers, according to TexNet’s earthquake catalog.
Recent regulatory work: According to the researchers, “Petroleum regulators in Texas and New Mexico collaborated with operators of injection wells to reduce the rate of injection into deep strata beginning in late 2021, leading to a reduction in the rate of cataloged earthquakes and indicating that retroactive mitigation works in reducing the seismic hazard.”
Go deeper: Read the full article here. You can also read all six articles on induced seismicity in the Midland basin in AAPG Bulletin’s Special Edition for December here.