The spatial footprint of injection wells in a global compilation of induced earthquake sequences

Goebel, Thomas H. W. and Brodsky, Emily E. (2018) The spatial footprint of injection wells in a global compilation of induced earthquake sequences. Science, 361 (6405). pp. 899-904. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aat5449

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aat5449

Abstract

Fluid injection can cause extensive earthquake activity, sometimes at unexpectedly large distances. Appropriately mitigating associated seismic hazards requires a better understanding of the zone of influence of injection. We analyze spatial seismicity decay in a global dataset of 18 induced cases with clear association between isolated wells and earthquakes. We distinguish two populations. The first is characterized by near-well seismicity density plateaus and abrupt decay, dominated by square-root space-time migration and pressure diffusion. Injection at these sites occurs within the crystalline basement. The second population exhibits larger spatial footprints and magnitudes, as well as a power law–like, steady spatial decay over more than 10 kilometers, potentially caused by poroelastic effects. Far-reaching spatial effects during injection may increase event magnitudes and seismic hazard beyond expectations based on purely pressure-driven seismicity.

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Item Type: Article
Subjects: Methodology > Method and procesing > Technology-seismicity interaction
Region > Australia
Region > France
Region > Germany
Region > Switzerland > St. Gallen
Region > USA
Inducing technology > Geothermal energy production
Project: S4CE > ST GALLEN: geothermal project
EPOS-IP > SOULTZ-SOUS-FORETS: stimulation and production of geothermal energy
SHEER project > THE GEYSERS: geothermal energy production