The regulatory agency overseeing the oil and gas industry in Texas has voted to maintain the wastewater injection permits for two companies whose North Texas wells are have been linked to a series of small earthquakes.
The Texas Railroad Commission decided to allow the permits, despite a study concluding that rumblings in the shallow Ellenburger formation that migrated down the fault into the deepest layer of rock triggered the quakes.
The commission held hearings after a study by Southern Methodist University scientists suggested the companies’ wells were responsible for the North Texas quakes.
The TRC determined in September that seismicity was likely not caused by injection wells, which store briny wastewater from hydraulic fracturing. TRC staff said the study established a correlation “too small to imply a causal relationship.”
Topics Texas
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Florida Sunshine: Big Improvement in Combined Ratio in 2025, Gallagher Says
Business Interruption Claims Arising From the Middle East Conflict
Three Sentenced in Bear-Suit Attacks Insurance Fraud Case
Chubb Q1 Net Income Increases 74% on Fewer Catastrophe Losses 


