INSIDER
“Should we be worried?”: Another well blowout in West Texas has a town smelling of rotten eggs
Read full article: “Should we be worried?”: Another well blowout in West Texas has a town smelling of rotten eggsExperts warn that more blowouts should be expected unless oil and gas companies change their methods.
Texas regulators limit oil and gas disposal wells in bid to reduce earthquakes in West Texas
Read full article: Texas regulators limit oil and gas disposal wells in bid to reduce earthquakes in West TexasInjecting saltwater back into the ground “is likely contributing to recent seismic activity,” the Railroad Commission of Texas has said.
Another large earthquake shows seismic activity continues to increase in West Texas, experts say
Read full article: Another large earthquake shows seismic activity continues to increase in West Texas, experts sayThe 5.2 magnitude earthquake is tied for the fourth strongest in Texas history. It occurred in an area where oilfield companies have long been injecting wastewater from fracking underground.
Oil and gas companies spill millions of gallons of wastewater in Texas
Read full article: Oil and gas companies spill millions of gallons of wastewater in TexasAn exclusive Inside Climate News analysis found that companies have spilled nearly 150 million gallons of toxic, highly saline wastewater in Texas over the last decade.
Landowners fear injection of fracking waste threatens West Texas aquifers
Read full article: Landowners fear injection of fracking waste threatens West Texas aquifersOperators pump a sea of “produced water” underground for disposal. Intensifying tremors raise fears that the deep toxic waste pits could intermingle with water used for farming and drinking.
Texas oil and gas agency investigating 5.4 magnitude earthquake in West Texas, the largest in three decades
Read full article: Texas oil and gas agency investigating 5.4 magnitude earthquake in West Texas, the largest in three decadesThe quake was the third largest in Texas history, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. An increase in seismic activity in Texas has been linked to injecting fracking wastewater underground.