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Oklahoma worries over swarm of earthquakes and connection to oil industry [View all]
Oklahoma worries over swarm of earthquakes and connection to oil industry
Economy
By Lori Montgomery January 28 at 8:01 PM
@loriamontgomery
montgomeryl@washpost.com
GUTHRIE, Okla. The earthquakes come nearly every day now, cracking drywall, popping floor tiles and rattling kitchen cabinets. On Monday, three quakes hit this historic land-rush town in 24 hours, booming and rumbling like the end of the world. ... After a while, you cant even tell whats a pre-shock or an after-shock. The ground just keeps moving, said Jason Murphey, 37, a Web developer who represents Guthrie in the state legislature. People are so frustrated and scared. They want to know the state is doing something.
What to do about the plague of earthquakes is, however, very much an open question in Oklahoma. Last year, 567 quakes of at least 3.0 magnitude rocked a swath of counties from the state capital to the Kansas line, alarming a populace long accustomed to fewer than two quakes a year.
Scientists implicated the oil and gas industry in particular, the deep wastewater disposal wells that have been linked to a dramatic increase in seismic activity across the central United States. But in a state founded on oil wealth, officials have been reluctant to crack down on an industry that accounts for a third of the economy and one in five jobs.
With seismologists warning that the spreading earthquake swarms could trigger something far bigger and potentially deadly, pressure is building to follow the lead of other oil and gas-producing states and take more aggressive action. ... The question is: Is it all about profits, or do the people have any rights at all? said Robert Freeman, 69, a retired Air Force contracting officer who is trying to rally his neighbors in Guthrie to demand a moratorium on new disposal wells.
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