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View Full Version : The Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) confirms manmade siesmic activity



TheNocturnalEgyptian
10th March 2012, 01:56 PM
Published on Friday, March 9, 2012 by Common Dreams
Confirmed: Fracking Caused Ohio Earthquakes

The Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) has confirmed that a series of earthquakes in the state were caused by injecting leftover fracking fluids, "brine," deep into wells.

ODNR stated today:


Geologists believe induced seismic activity is extremely rare, but it can occur with the confluence of a series of specific circumstances. After investigating all available geological formation and well activity data, ODNR regulators and geologists found a number of co-occurring circumstances strongly indicating the Youngstown area earthquakes were induced. Specifically, evidence gathered by state officials suggests fluid from the Northstar 1 disposal well [a deep injection well primarily used for oil and gas fluid waste disposal] intersected an unmapped fault in a near-failure state of stress causing movement along that fault.

The ODNR report notes that in 2011, the Youngstown, Ohio area experienced 12 "low-level seismic events," and that the 2011 earthquakes were unique because of their proximity to a deep disposal well, known as Northstar 1, used to inject fracking fluids.

The report adds that "before 2011, [Ohio Seismic Network] had not recorded earthquake activity with epicenters located in the Youngstown area."

From April 26 to Dec. 15, 2011, state geologists and regulators investigated a possible link between the well injections and the earthquakes, but were unable to obtain enough necessary data.

In Dec. of 2011 equipment and assistance was provided by the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, and after obtaining more seismic data, the ODNR director stopped operations at the well.

Based on the data, the report states:

A number of coincidental circumstances appear to make a compelling argument for the recent Youngstown-area seismic events to have been induced.

Based on the new information, Ohio is not banning fracking, but has new regulations for fracking fluids disposal.

With more than 144,000 Class II wells injecting more than 2 billion gallons of leftover fracking fluids every day in the United States, according to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and Ohio’s Class II disposal well regulations meeting or exceeding EPA regulations, questions linger about the potential for fracking-induced earthquakes elsewhere.


http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2012/03/09-1

Cebu_4_2
10th March 2012, 02:35 PM
Earthquakes are a minor side effect of the problems to come.

Golden
10th March 2012, 06:49 PM
Earthquakes are a minor side effect of the problems to come.

QFT. Natural aquafiers and wells will become polluted. What a waste for narrow minded short term "gain."

Cebu_4_2
10th March 2012, 10:35 PM
it is all a smoke screen for depopulation just like the USoI did to Liberia. poison the water and nothing will grow. This is a very very serious thing happening across the USoI and the sheeple are led to the slaughter. I have not had much time to post lately but some things need to be said.

TheNocturnalEgyptian
10th March 2012, 10:59 PM
I was just posting to prove that manmade seismic activity is possible. I had no idea hydrofracking wells was so biologically dangerous until I started reading about it.

gunDriller
11th March 2012, 08:02 AM
it is all a smoke screen for depopulation just like the USoI did to Liberia. poison the water and nothing will grow. This is a very very serious thing happening across the USoI and the sheeple are led to the slaughter. I have not had much time to post lately but some things need to be said.

sh.t, look what Barrick does to South American countries, for a yield of 3 grams of gold per ton or rock.

at one facility they use 249 tons of cyanide per ton of gold recovered.

if those South American countries learned to start protecting their environment - i.e., the place they live - Barrick would have to shut down those operations.

TheNocturnalEgyptian
5th April 2012, 11:31 PM
Quebec bans fracking - pending studies

CALGARY - The province of Quebec has moved from a de facto ban on shale gas development to a "complete and total moratorium," lamented Calgary oilpatch executive Michael Binnion on Tuesday, following news that a review on hydraulic fracturing won't include any demonstrations in the province.

A committee named by Quebec Environment Minister Pierre Arcand to determine whether shale gas can be extracted while respecting the environment released plans Tuesday for further study and recommended the minister not authorize hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, even for research purposes during an ongoing halt in development.

Arcand, in announcing the strategic environmental assessment last May, had said fracking would be allowed for research purposes. Committee chair Robert Joly said in his report that Quebec could rely on laboratory experiments on fracking.

While the industry doesn't need to see fracking in action, the agency overseeing the study - the Bureau d'audiences publiques Sur l'environment (BAPE) - had a mandate to examine the social acceptability of the process in Quebec, including demonstrations, argued Binnion, the chief executive of junior producer Questerre Energy Corp.

"I'm disappointed that they have, on their own, rejected that mandate," Binnion said. "The benefit to our industry is social acceptability and being able to show Quebecers with their own eyes that it works safely, in a French-language context."

Questerre has land prospective for shale gas in Quebec, including about 324,000 hectares where Talisman Energy Inc. has the majority interest and another 81,000 hectares with other partners.

Quebec issued a temporary ban on hydraulic fracturing pending further study last March, putting a halt to exploration in the province, though companies had expected limited drilling for research purposes. Environ-mental groups, farmers and others in Quebec had spoken out against shale gas development in the province.

The committee will order several more studies with a deadline of next spring, Joly said Tuesday, with the final report targeted for completion some time in 2013. He reported that the committee learned a lot from public hearings held from November 2011 to January 2012 and said there would be further hearings, geared toward specific sectors.

Committee members plan to also travel to Alberta and B.C., and to Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York, where there are also shale-gas deposits.

http://www.calgaryherald.com/business/Quebec+bans+fracking+pending+studies/6407785/story.html

ShortJohnSilver
6th April 2012, 12:34 PM
Pennsylvania is at the "upper" end of the New Madrid Seismic Zone, isn't it?

TheNocturnalEgyptian
6th April 2012, 12:46 PM
I believe so, yes.