FOX CREEK, Alta. – The mayor of an Alberta town in an area of heavy hydraulic fracking is expressing concern over the oil industry’s impact after yet another earthquake hit his community.
“Fox Creek town council is very concerned,” wrote mayor Jim Ahn in a letter to reporters. “It seems industry and the provincial government have been turning a blind eye as to what has been going on in our area.”
Fox Creek — a town that relies almost entirely on oil and gas for jobs — was hit Tuesday by another earthquake. The quake had a magnitude of 4.8, big enough to rumble building and wag pictures on the wall and count as Alberta’s largest.
READ MORE: St. Albert feels tremors from earthquake near Fox Creek
It was the town’s 367th seismic event since January 2015.
“There’s a reasonable probability that this is related to hydraulic fracturing,” geophysicist Jeff Gu said. “This is based mainly from the history in the region.”
While the Alberta Energy Regulator hasn’t definitively linked the activity to the amount of fracking in the area, it has implemented special regulations for fracking in the area and is conducting research into the issue.
“It was relatively quiet, seismically quiet, prior to 2013,” Gu said. “Then in late 2013, in December, there was a sequence of earthquakes that took place in that area. Since then, there has been heightened seismic activity.”
Tracking history is one thing; predicting if and when a bigger quake could rattle Fox Creek is another thing entirely, Gu said.
“I don’t think anybody actually knows.
“The first thing we have to do is determine where the faults are, what’s the mechanism related to these earthquakes,” Gu said. “I don’t think there’s a set equation.”
But earthquakes aren’t the only thing Ahn is concerned about.
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“We have industry pulling water from our rivers, streams and lakes at rates we feel far exceed their capabilities to replenish themselves,” he wrote.
“We do not want to be left with swamps that were once prize trophy lakes.”
Watch below: Gu speaks about the Fox Creek-area earthquake
The town has had to spend $300,000 to truck in water after levels in the aquifers it normally depends on fell too low, said Ahn. The town has received whistleblower reports of drilling rig leaks that could affect Fox Creek’s water supply and received contradictory messages from those involved.
Ahn said the town fears government and regulatory officials don’t have its best interests at heart.
“We have had many experts in these fields explain to us that what is happening has been examined and explored for years,” he wrote. “We are still very worried that we, the town of Fox Creek, will be the ones left that will have to try and make a life here after all the activity is gone.”
(Map courtesy: Patrick Cain, Global News Data Desk)
Fox Creek is trying to sell itself as a good place to start a business and raise a family and news about well blowouts and earthquakes don’t help, Ahn said.
“We have spent millions of dollars to try and attract people to come here … what we do not need is negative headlines.”
Ahn said council has invited Alberta Premier Rachel Notley to visit the town and speak with council about its concerns. Notley has not yet replied, he said.
The premier is asking that an Alberta Energy Regulator review of fracking be sped up.
“My officials have been in touch with the AER to find out exactly what the situation is and where we can get more details on that,” Notley said Tuesday.
“Generally speaking the AER has been engaged in a review of fracking in particular as it relates to this issue and I’ll be asking them to speed that review up a little bit more to come up with some recommendations that we can consider sooner rather than later.”
READ MORE: What is fracking?
Those in the industry believe work should be done safely, but also worry what the province – and the country – would look like without fracking.
“It’s very important. It sustains the community right now,” Brett Lamb, general manager of Noble Drilling, said.
“Fox Creek is driven by the oil and gas industry and fracking is what is driving industry right now.”
He’s worried about what might happen if the government decided to shut it down.
“If fracking left Fox Creek or Alberta or Canada in general, it would really be a major crush to the industry. The price of oil is bad enough as it is. There’s a lot of unemployed Albertans right now.”
“The government needs to look at it, but they need to look at it responsibly.”
With files from Global News
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