Next One Could be Big One for Napa

Dec 18, 2014

(Wines&Vines) - The magnitude-6 earthquake that shook the Napa Valley on Aug. 24 was the strongest the region had felt in more than 20 years. But the next earthquake in the area could be much stronger, according to preliminary research the University of California, Davis, presented this week at the American Geophysical Union conference in San Francisco, Calif.

New technologies and social media enabled the UC Davis team to produce scientific information for the public at unprecedented speeds following the quake, according to a news release about UC Davis’ research into the quake.

The quake struck at 3:20 a.m., and most residents of the area were at home asleep. Many winemakes and winery owners said the timing was a lucky break—had it happened at 3 p.m., many people could have been injured or possibly killed from collapsing barrel stacks. The quake caused extensive damage to downtown Napa and the Browns Valley area of Napa County.

A few wineries north of the city of Napa, also suffered damage including Trefethen Vineyards, where a historic winery building buckled and nearly collapsed. The Trefethen family has pledged to rehabilitate the building if possible.

$1 billion in damage

Initial estimates put the total cost of the damage at $362 million for the city of Napa, with the wine industry suffering $80 to $100 million. Karen Clark & Co., a private risk-management firm, estimated the damage total at $1 billion based on computer modeling of the quake’s force and the size of the area it affected. Of that $1 billion in damage, the firm estimates insured losses would total “well below” $100 million. Clark estimated that 60% of wineries in Napa Valley suffered some type of damage, with a value between $80 million and $100 million.

The general feeling among those in the wine industry and Napa residents that the quake “could have been much worse” is backed up by the research from UC Davis.

According to the UC Davis release, the team of geologists and graduate students from the UC Davis Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences found that the West Napa Fault line is longer than previously thought and capable of a much stronger, more destructive earthquake in the future.

The researchers found that the total fault length is about 45 miles. That is enough to produce a magnitude-7 earthquake, which has 31 times the energy release of a magnitude 6 earthquake. That energy release happens on a longer section of fault with more slippage, which contributes to producing larger earthquakes.

“In terms of Napa Valley, it raises what is possible,” said associate professor Mike Oskin, who helped lead a class in measuring and mapping the fault. “It would be a much larger earthquake and much more devastating than what has happened historically.”

Geological evidence along the fault suggests such a quake might happen every 1,000 to 2,000 years, though Oskin said no one knows precisely.

The class also compared this year’s earthquake to one that occurred in nearby Yountville in 2000 and found they were on the same fault, affirming that a small portion of fault ruptured twice in the past 15 years.


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