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Oil, Drought and Earthquakes Discussed at Governor’s Energy Conference

Joe Wertz / StateImpact Oklahoma
Col. Michael Teague, Secretary of Energy and Environment, and Governor Mary Fallin speak at the Governor's Energy Conference on Thursday afternoon.

Politicians, agency leaders and energy industry executives gathered in Oklahoma City Thursday for the Governor’s Energy Conference. The annual event is largely promotional, but as Joe Wertz from StateImpact reports, it also serves as a preview of the biggest energy policy topics for the coming year.

There were presentations on new technology that generates energy from trash, optimistic presentations on jobs and Oklahoma’s oil and gas boom, and discussions about wind turbines and crude exports. But in her opening remarks, Governor Mary Fallin also touched on some of the challenges facing the industry, including drought and earthquakes.

“We want to be able to know what the facts are, what the science is, and bring the experts together, because we’re talking about people’s homes and business that have been shaken.”

Fallin used the conference to announce the creation of a new Council on Seismic Activity to study Oklahoma’s earthquakes, which research has linked to wastewater wells used by the oil and gas industry.

Joe was a founding reporter for StateImpact Oklahoma (2011-2019) covering the intersection of economic policy, energy and environment, and the residents of the state.
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