Earthquake occurrence rates in some parts of the Central United States have been elevated for a number of years; this increase has been widely attributed to deep wastewater injection associated with oil and gas activities. This induced seismicity has caused damage to buildings and infrastructure and substantial public concern. In March 2016, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) published its first earthquake ground motion hazard model that accounts for the elevated seismicity, producing a one-year forecast encompassing both induced and natural earthquakes. To assess the potential impact of the elevated seismicity on buildings and the public, this paper quantifies forecasted risks of (1) building collapse and (2) the falling of nonstructural building components by combining the 2016 USGS hazard model with fragility curves for generic modern code-compliant buildings. The assessment shows significant increases in both types of risk compared to that caused by noninduced earthquakes alone; the magnitude of the increases varies from a few times to more than 100 times, depending on location, building period (which is correlated to building height), alternatives for the hazard model, and type of risk of interest. For exploratory purposes only, we also estimate revised values of the risk-targeted ground motion that are currently used for designing buildings.
Increases in Life-Safety Risks to Building Occupants from Induced Earthquakes in the Central United States Available to Purchase
aU.S. Geological Survey, 1711 Illinois St., Golden, CO 80401
bCivil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, 1111 Engineering Dr., Boulder, CO 80309
aU.S. Geological Survey, 1711 Illinois St., Golden, CO 80401
bCivil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, 1111 Engineering Dr., Boulder, CO 80309
aU.S. Geological Survey, 1711 Illinois St., Golden, CO 80401
bCivil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, 1111 Engineering Dr., Boulder, CO 80309
Email: [email protected]
aU.S. Geological Survey, 1711 Illinois St., Golden, CO 80401
bCivil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, 1111 Engineering Dr., Boulder, CO 80309
aU.S. Geological Survey, 1711 Illinois St., Golden, CO 80401
bCivil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, 1111 Engineering Dr., Boulder, CO 80309
Email: [email protected]
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CitationTaojun Liu, Nicolas Luco, Abbie B. Liel; Increases in Life-Safety Risks to Building Occupants from Induced Earthquakes in the Central United States. Earthquake Spectra 2019;; 35 (2): 471–488. doi: https://doi.org/10.1193/041618EQS095M
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- building codes
- damage
- earthquake prediction
- earthquakes
- engineering properties
- fluid injection
- geologic hazards
- human activity
- hydraulic fracturing
- induced earthquakes
- Kansas
- magnitude
- Midcontinent
- models
- natural hazards
- numerical models
- Oklahoma
- petroleum
- probability
- production
- regulations
- risk assessment
- seismic intensity
- seismicity
- statistical analysis
- Texas
- United States
- waste water