WND By Scott W. Tinker, Real Clear Wire June 14, 2026
Texas has an opportunity to continue as the leader in oil and gas production for decades to come. To do so, industry and the state must manage and productively use the significant volume of water that gets produced along with the oil and gas.
Permian oil and gas production is vital to U. S. transportation and power generation. Each day the Permian Basin produces about 6 million barrels of oil (~ 45% of U.S. supply) daily, which industry refines to produce gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and myriad other products.
The basin also produces about 26 billion cubic feet of natural gas (~ 22% of U.S. supply), which industry processes for industrial, residential, commercial and transportation use. In addition, natural gas has become the backbone of Texas power generation and is increasingly being called on for "behind the meter" electricity generation for data centers.
Associated with oil and gas, each day the Permian basin produces over 20 million barrels of salty water! North Dakota, Oklahoma, Appalachia and other regions also produce significant water along with oil or natural gas. In Texas, industry reuses what it can, then transports and disposes the remainder into deep or shallow rock formations, which changes subsurface pressure conditions and can induce earthquakes.
A decade ago, as the State Geologist of Texas, I worked with the Texas Legislature, industry, and academics to create TexNet at the Bureau of Economic Geology (BEG). BEG maintains over 200 seismometers tracking earthquakes across Texas and makes the data publicly available.
The Railroad Commission of Texas, which regulates oil and gas activity, uses TexNet to help mitigate earthquakes, while still allowing for production of oil and gas.
More:
https://www.wnd.com/2026/06/maximizing-oil-field-produced-water-use-west-texas/