RRC Earns Award for Seismic Monitoring, Response The RRC has been working with stakeholders, including operators, to develop response plans for the SRAs to reduce the frequency and intensity of injection-induced earthquakes.
The Railroad Commission and the University of Texas at Austin’s Bureau of Economic Geology were both recognized in May with the Bruno Hanson/Midland College Environmental Excellence Award for collaborative efforts with the TexNet Seismic Monitoring Program.
“We are honored to receive this award,” said Paul Dubois, Assistant Director of RRC Technical Permitting. “We’ve put a lot of work into the response plans and developing best practices for disposal well permitting in seismic areas to better protect the residents of the Permian Basin and the environment. And we will continue to do this important work.”
The annual award, which was presented at the Permian Basin Environmental Regulatory Seminar, recognizes exceptional achievements in environmental stewardship and is named for the geologist Bruno Hanson, who was a pioneer in developing environmentally friendly procedures for the energy industry. The Midland College Petroleum Professional Development Center works closely with community leaders to identify superior environmental practices in the oil and gas industry.
The first response plan, which was effective at the end of December, was for Gardendale SRA, which is north of Odessa and northwest of Midland, prohibited deep injection below the top of the Strawn Formation, which occurs at around 10,000 feet in depth but can vary.
The RRC has been helping BEG expand its TexNet Seismic Monitoring Program, which has been a critical tool used by the RRC to monitor seismic activity near injection/ disposal wells throughout the state and which was instrumental in the creation of RRC’s Seismic Response Areas (SRA) in West Texas.
ENERGY NEWS
For the Northern Culberson-Reeves SRA – which is adjacent to Guadalupe Mountain National Park and is near the border of New Mexico to the north – the RRC began
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