Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology
Volume 50, Number 7, July 2011, pp. 55-60

SPE-137730-PA

Net CO2 Stored in North American EOR Projects

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DOI  More information 10.2118/137730-PA http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/137730-PA

Citation

  • Faltinson, J. and Gunter, B. 2011. Net CO2 Stored in North American EOR Projects. J Can Pet Technol  50 (7/8): 55-60. SPE-137730-PA. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/137730-PA.

Discipline Categories

  • 6.11.1 CO2 Sequestration

Keywords

  • CO2 emissions , Enhanced-oil recovery (EOR), CO2 storage , CO2 utilization

Summary

One promising method for reducing carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions when storing CO2 in oil reservoirs is CO2 enhanced oil recovery (EOR). In order to make a significant contribution to mitigating climate change from emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs), CO2 EOR must actually reduce CO2 emissions by storing net positive volumes of CO2. This requires that CO2-EOR schemes store more CO2 in the subsurface than the execution of the project emits (net positive storage of CO2). Fugitive emissions associated with CO2 EOR primarily include the burning of fossil fuels (fuel gas) to power CO2-injection compressors and the on-site consumption of electric power, which results in CO2 emissions off site, where the power was generated. Evaluating the effectiveness of CO2 EOR in reducing CO2 emissions must be conducted in an unbiased way in which only relevant fugitive emissions that are directly connected with the CO2-EOR project are deducted. It has been suggested that fugitive emissions from downstream oil refining and consumption of the transportation products should be deducted from the net CO2 stored by CO2-EOR projects. This presumes that these emissions (refining and consumption) are incremental to world aggregate oil-consumption emissions and would not occur if the EOR project was not executed. World oil production is determined by world oil demand and if CO2-EOR projects were not undertaken, some other source of oil would step forward and fill the gap. Therefore, executing CO2-EOR projects will not result in incremental aggregate refining and consumption emissions. When downstream-refining and product-consumption fugitive emissions are excluded from the calculation of project-life-cycle CO2-EOR storage, it is clear that CO2 EOR does result in net positive CO2 storage.

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History

  • Original manuscript received: 28 January 2011
  • Meeting paper published: 20 October 2010
  • Revised manuscript received: 26 March 2011
  • Manuscript approved: 25 May 2011
  • Published online: 1 July 2011
  • Version of record: 14 July 2011