SPE Projects, Facilities & Construction
Volume 6,
Number 1,
March 2011,
pp. 41-53
Summary
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is capable of reducing atmospheric
emissions of greenhouse gases from coal or gas-fired power plants. The upward
buoyancy of dense-phase carbon dioxide (CO2) in deep reservoirs
means that sites need to be chosen with a methodology that carefully evaluates
details of performance during and after the injection process. Standard methods
of site evaluation for saline aquifers overwhelmingly focus on the aspects of
geological containment and monitorability. Also important to storage-site
performance is the engineering design of transport and injection. Transport to
storage in offshore saline aquifers is normally expected to be by pipeline.
There are several proposed methods of CO2 injection: for example, as
a dense phase, in the liquid or supercritical phase, as water-alternating-gas
cycles, or as carbonated brine. These result in different migration pathways in
the aquifer during the short term (1 to 50 years) and different storage
distributions in the long term (1,000 to 10,000 years). To develop a
methodology suitable for making informed decisions for aquifers offshore of the
UK, several of these different methods are being evaluated. A
chemical-engineering and reservoir-engineering approach will be used to define
some of the important surface-transport and subsurface interactions. Important
surface features may include the energy balance, location, sizing, materials
specification, and costing of surface equipment for mixing and transporting
CO2.
© 2011. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
30 April 2010
- Meeting paper published:
8 September 2009
- Revised manuscript received:
23 August 2010
- Manuscript approved:
15 September 2010
- Published online:
28 February 2011
- Version of record:
3 March 2011