Geothermal plant ‘triggered earthquake’ in SKorea
Credit to Author: The Manila Times| Date: Wed, 20 Mar 2019 09:24:17 +0000
SEOUL: A rare earthquake in South Korea was triggered by the country’s first experimental geothermal power plant, a team of government-commissioned experts said Wednesday.
The southeastern port city of Pohang was rattled by a 5.4-magnitude earthquake in November 2017—the second-most powerful tremor ever in the normally seismically stable South.
Dozens of people were injured and more than 1,500 left homeless— while a nationwide college entrance exam was postponed in an unprecedented move as authorities scrambled with recovery efforts.
A year-long government-commissioned study pointed to the geothermal power plant as the cause.
The plant works by injecting high-pressure water deep underground to tap heat from the Earth’s crust, but the process had produced micro-sized seismic activity as a result, said Lee Kang-kun, who led the research.
“And as time passed, this triggered the earthquake in Pohang,” he added. “We concluded that the Pohang earthquake was a ‘triggered quake’. It wasn’t a natural earthquake.”
Pohang residents filed a lawsuit against the government after the quake, and following the assessment Seoul expressed its “deep regret.”
The geothermal plant—which was temporarily suspended during the study—will be “permanently shuttered”, the trade, industry and energy ministry said in a statement.
It cost around 80 billion won ($71 million) to build and test operations began in 2016.
Unlike neighbouring Japan, the Korean peninsula rarely experiences significant quakes but seismic activity is closely monitored as a spike can be the first indication that North Korea has staged a nuclear test.
The country’s most powerful quake to date was a 5.8-magnitude tremor that struck Gyeongju, also in the southeast, in September 2016. AFP
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