Posted on 09/27/2014 10:50:10 PM PDT by GonzoII
Kind of like blaming a homeowner for over watering his garden when his house is swallowed by a sinkhole...
Any recoverable oil is removed prior to injection, but the water is itself a lubricant.
The good Dr. is probably onto something in #8.
To quote hitlery “what difference can it make?”. Unless I missed something, haven’t all these quakes blamed on water injection been just relatively light tremors? Now if these start getting up in the breaking things range, might be something to worry with, until then enjoy the thrill.
So, why is it that the 4 CORNERS area which has tens of thousands of gas wells is still stable?
Ditto!
Better the tremors locally than having to bomb muslims internationally. Stop giving tons of money to merciless lazy jerks and spend a tiny portion of your gas dollars making a little stronger structure. The earth aint gonna explode like California, it’s not a major fault with volcanoes coming, it’s only gonna shake a little.
USGS. Feral gummint. Right.
This water may not even be from fracking in the basin but from a third type of production called "coal gas." This gas is produced from water saturated coal beds that have gas trapped by the presence and pressure of water. To release the gas, large volumes of water are pumped at the BEGINNING of the extraction process to lower the hydraulic head so as to release the gas. This gas doesn't have the type of volatiles associated with conventural production so the water is relatively fresh. It would be useful to reuse the water but injection may be the more economical option for the producer. In addition, and unlike conventional gas production, water volumes decrease with time, much like heavy pumping conventional water wells with no recharge.
ping
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