Summary
An early field project of the Southeast Regional Carbon Sequestration
Partnership (SECARB) was conducted in Cranfield oil field, western Mississippi.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) was injected into coarse-grained fluvial
deposits of the Cretaceous lower Tuscaloosa formation, forming a gentle
anticline at depths of 3300 m. CO2 injection started in July 2008,
increasing to 23 wells (as of May 2011), with total injection rates greater
than 1 million tons/yr. Focused monitoring programs of the deep subsurface and
near surface have been implemented in different study areas. Here we present
results of the near-surface monitoring program over a 3-year period, including
shallow groundwater monitoring and soil-gas monitoring. A general methodology
of detecting CO2 leakage into shallow groundwater chemistry is
proposed. A set of geochemical indicator parameters was identified on the basis
of the characterization of groundwater geochemistry, and these were further
tested and validated using numerical modeling approaches, laboratory
experiments, and field experiments. For soil-gas monitoring, a site (P-site)
containing a plugged and abandoned well, a nearby open pit, and an engineered
pad (representing a typical industrial near-surface environment for soil-gas
monitoring) was selected for detailed study. The site was heavily instrumented
with various sensors for measuring soil-gas concentrations at different depths,
soil-water content, matric potential, and weather information. Three monitoring
technologies were assessed: soil CO2 concentration measurements,
CO2 flux measurements on the land surface, and multiple soil-gas
component measurements. Results indicate that soil-gas-component measurements
provide reliable information for gas-leakage detection. Methodologies of
nearsurface monitoring developed in this study can be used to improve
CO2-leakage monitoring at other CO2 sequestration
projects. This early field project was funded by the US Department of Energy,
National Energy Technology Laboratory, as part of the Regional Carbon
Sequestration Partnerships (RCSP) program. SECARB is led by the Southern States
Energy Board (SSEB).
© 2013. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
13 February 2012
- Meeting paper published:
7 February 2012
- Revised manuscript received:
29 July 2012
- Manuscript approved:
17 August 2012
- Published online:
31 January 2013