Here’s How the Media Misrepresented a Study to Attack Fracking

By Published on March 31, 2016

Environmental groups and media outlets misrepresented a recently-published government study published on man-made tremors. Activists say the study shows hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, is putting seven million lives at risk from induced earthquakes, but that’s not what the government study actually says.

The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) released a study Monday, which analyzed the risks ofΒ man-madeΒ earthquakes in America. The study includedΒ the caveatΒ that man-madeΒ earthquakes weren’t likely to cause damageΒ andΒ stated thatΒ humans areΒ β€œonly rarely the cause of felt earthquakes.” The USGS report never referenced fracking, and stated several times that β€œ[w]astewater disposal is the primary cause of the recent increase in [man-made] earthquakes in the central United States.”

The study’s conclusionsΒ closely mirror those of top geologists.

Media includingΒ The Washington PostΒ andΒ BloombergΒ misrepresented the USGS report and promptly resorted toΒ fear-mongering,Β claiming that scientists β€œdo not know if there is an upper limit on the magnitude of induced earthquakes” and linking the quakes to fracking. MediaΒ outlets glossed over the study’s limited risks and specification that fracking wasn’t causing the quakesΒ and ran headlines claiming millions of people were at risk.

The media’s inaccurate claims were quickly amplified by environmentalists and progressive groups online. The national online organizer of The Sierra ClubΒ took to TwitterΒ toΒ claim that aΒ map from the study showed the hazards of fracking and was promptly approvingly retweeted by the organization’s official account. TheΒ progressive media blog ThinkProgressΒ actually claimed that fracking wasΒ directly linked to dangerous earthquakes, according to studies it declined to cite.

β€œWhile some are using the USGS report to link earthquakes to hydraulic fracturing, that’s simply not the case,” Chris Warren, a spokesman for the Institute for Energy Research, told The Daily Caller News Foundation. β€œThe seismic activity from the practice of hydraulic fracturing is so minuscule that it’s been compared a car driving by. Those claiming hydraulic fracturing is causing significant seismic activity are either uninformed or pushing a political agenda.”

The USGSΒ statesΒ thatΒ β€œ[h]ydraulic fracturing, commonly known as β€˜fracking’, does not appear to be linked to the increased rate of magnitude 3 and larger earthquakes.”

Earthquakes are measured on a logarithmic scale, andΒ the difference between whole numbers on the scale is huge. A 9.0 quakeΒ can devastate a country,Β while aΒ 3.0 quakeΒ generallyΒ cannot be felt except under extremely unusual circumstances, such as standing on the highest floors of a skyscraper. The force of a 3.0 quakeΒ isΒ far less than the amount of energy necessary toΒ make a plastic chair fall over.

Fracking earthquakeΒ myths fromΒ environmentalistsΒ areΒ so widespread that the USGS, which created the map, actually maintains aΒ β€œMyths and Misconceptions” sectionΒ of its website to debunk them.Β The very first myth the USGS corrects saysΒ β€œ[f]racking is NOT causing most of the induced earthquakes. Wastewater disposal is the primary cause of the recent increase in earthquakes in the central United States.”

Wastewater disposal can cause small earthquakes, but areΒ several orders of magnitude smaller than the kind of earthquakes that can actually do serious damage. Additionally,Β under one percent of wastewater injection wells are linked to earthquakesΒ of any kind.

Injecting wastewater underground is on its way out regardless. AsΒ previously reported by The DCNF in late January, a West Virginia company has developed a method to purify wastewaterΒ so it can be reused, or discharged into a nearby river under environmentalΒ permit. The company separates out various salts and other products of fracking processes, then re-sells them for use in the chemical manufacturing industry.

 

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Copyright 2016 Daily Caller News Foundation

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