A sharp earthquake centred near one of the world’s key oil hubs
Sunday night triggered fears that the magnitude 5.0 tremor might have
damaged key infrastructure in addition to causing what police described
as “quite a bit of damage” in the Oklahoma prairie town of Cushing.
The
Oklahoma Corporation Commission said it and the Oklahoma Geological
Survey were investigating after the quake, which struck at 7:44 p.m. and
was felt as far away as Iowa, Illinois and Texas.
“The OCC’s
Pipeline Safety Department has been in contact with pipeline operators
in the Cushing oil storage terminal under state jurisdiction and there
have been no immediate reports of any problems,” the commission’s
spokesman, Matt Skinner, said in a statement. “The assessment of the
infrastructure continues.”
The oil storage terminal is one of the world’s largest.
The
Cushing Police Department reported “quite a bit of damage” from the
earthquake but details were not immediately available. Photos posted to
social media show piles of debris at the base of commercial buildings in
the city.
The Cushing Public School District has cancelled classes Monday in order to assess the earthquake damage.
Cushing, which has a population of about 7,900, bills itself as the “Pipeline Crossroads of the World.”
Oklahoma
has had thousands of earthquakes in recent years, with nearly all
traced to the underground injection of wastewater left over from oil and
gas production. Sunday’s quake was centred one mile west of Cushing —
and about 25 miles south of where a magnitude 4.3 quake forced a
shutdown of several wells last week, reports The Associated Press.
The U.S. Geological Survey said initially that Sunday’s quake was of magnitude 5.3 but later lowered the reading to 5.0.
According
to USGS data, there have been 19 earthquakes in Oklahoma in the past
week. When particularly strong quakes hit, the Oklahoma Corporation
Commission directs well operators to seize wastewater injections or
reduce volume.
A 5.8 earthquake — a record for Oklahoma — hit
Pawnee on September 3. Shortly afterward, geologists speculated on
whether the tremor occurred on a previously unknown fault.
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