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Gulf Coast Carbon Center Industry-Academic Research Partnership

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Assessment of options for carbon capture and sequestration ... oil-production and CO2 usage for CO2 EOR floods in Gulf Coast clastic reservoirs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Gulf Coast Carbon Center Industry-Academic Research Partnership


1
Gulf Coast Carbon CenterIndustry-Academic
Research Partnership
Assessment of options for carbon capture and
sequestration in an area of large sources and
large geologic capacity
2
Geologic Sequestration Emplaces Dense-Phase CO2
in Pore Systems in Rock
CO2 injected at pressure into pore space at
depths below and isolated (sequestered) from
potable water.
Carbon extracted from a coal or other fossil fuel
CO2 stored in pore space over geologically signif
icant time frames.
3
Who is the Gulf Coast Carbon Center?
Hosted by
Industry Sponsors
Staff
New Members Sempra, Shell, TXU Fayette Power
Plant (LCRA/Austin Energy)
4
Gulf Coast Carbon Center Collaborations
  • DOE funded Southeast Regional Carbon
    Sequestration Partnership (SECARB) led by
    Southern States Energy Board
  • 4.9 M Phase II Stacked Storage EORBrine
    storage
  • 35M early demonstration with Denbury Resources
    Cranfield Mississippi
  • Sponsored projects SE US power companies
  • DOE funded Southwest Regional Carbon
    Sequestration Partnership (SWCARB) led by New
    Mexico Tech
  • Project at SACROC hosted by KinderMorgen

5
GCCC Strategic Plan 2007-2010
Goal 1 To educate the next generation of carbon
management professionals and regulators Goal 2
To develop selection criteria for commercial CO2
sequestration sites Goal 3 To define an adequate
and reliable monitoring and verification strategy
applicable to long term storage Goal 4
Evaluation of sources risk and liability
potentially associated with CO2
sequestration Goal 5 Evaluation of economic
potential of CO2 to enhance oil and gas recovery
in the Gulf Coast Goal 6 Development of market
framework and economic models for CO2 capture and
storage in the Gulf Coast Goal 7 GCCC service
and training to partners
6
Goal 1 Educate the Next Generation of Carbon
Management Professionals and Regulators
  • Support from Jackson School of Geosciences
  • Student training
  • Post-doc program
  • Internships and visiting scientists
  • Rebekah Lee - Oxford University public
    acceptance survey

7
Goal 2 Develop Selection Criteria for Commercial
CO2 Sequestration Sites
Vanessa Nunez and Mark Holtz
Objective 2.1 Guidance Manual
  • Create a rigorous, comprehensive manual with
    pragmatic guidance in non-technical language on
    best practices for selecting a geologic
    sequestration site in brine-bearing formations
    (saline aquifers).
  • Guidance derived in part from assessments of
    sites for Texas FutureGen two successful sites
    selected.

8
Objective 2.2 Reduce current uncertainty in
estimates of the capacity of brine formations for
CO2 storage
Storage in coal
  • Participation in DOE Regional Carbon
    Sequestration National Atlas
  • www.natcarb.org

Storage in brine
Development of advanced methods for capacity
assessment
Storage in oil and gas
JeanPhillipe Nicot and Srivatsan Lakasminisarihan
Rebecca Smyth
9
Options for Estimating Capacity
  • Volumetric approach Total pore volume x
    Efficiency factor (E)
  • Free CO2 volume in structural and stratigraphic
    traps
  • Trapped CO2 residual phase
  • Volume dissolved
  • Volume that can be stored beneath an area
    constrained by surface uses or by other
    unacceptable risks well fields, faults
  • Maximum pressure as a limit on capacity
  • Displaced water as a limit on capacity

Volumetric
Risk-based
10
Effect of Depth of Formation in Storage Capacity
Volume injected/pore volume
  • Increased capacity with depth of formation almost
    entirely due to higher safe injection pressure

11
Goal 3 Define an Adequate and Reliable
Monitoring and Verification Strategy Applicable
to Long Term Storage
  • Objective 3.1 Evaluate existing approaches for
    monitoring and verification of CO2 storage in
    brine formations by assessing sensitivity,
    accuracy and precision of tools relative to
    plausible leakage signals.
  • Objective 3.2 To Develop and evaluate innovative
    technologies for Early Warning detection of CO2
    leakage
  • Objective 3.3 Test an innovative approach to
    monitoring and verification of CO2 storage by
    combining measurements of deformation with
    geomechanical modeling.

12
Goal 3 Field Tests of Monitoring and
Verification Technologies
Proposed East Texas FutureGen Site
Field project 2 in process Cranfield
Frio Test Site
SACROC
Proposed West Texas FutureGen Site
13
Frio Brine Pilot near Houston TX
Observation well
Injection well
Injection Well
Observation Well
U-tubes
Downhole P and T
30 m
RST logs
Frio Blue Sandstone 15m thick
Tubing hung seismic source and hydrophones
14
Early Warning Monitoring Options
  • Atmosphere
  • Ultimate receptor but dynamic
  • Biosphere
  • Assurance of no damage but dynamic
  • Soil and Vadose Zone
  • Integrator but dynamic
  • Aquifer and USDW
  • Integrator, slightly isolated from ecological
    effects
  • Above injection monitoring zone
  • First indicator, monitor small signals, stable.
  • In injection zone - plume
  • Oil-field type technologies. Will not identify
    small leaks
  • In injection zone - outside plume
  • Assure lateral migration of CO2 and brine is
    acceptable

Atmosphere
Biosphere
Vadose zone soil
Aquifer and USDW
Seal
Monitoring Zone
Seal
CO2 plume
15
Assessing Pressure and Tilt
In-house software development for
fault/fracture stability analyses
tip
16
Goal 4 Evaluation of Sources Risk and Liability
Potentially Associated with CO2 Sequestration
  • Objective 4.1 Write a primer based on literature
    review on risk and liability potentially
    associated with CO2 sequestration in the Gulf
    Coast
  • Objective 4.2 To develop a predictive ability to
    evaluate the risk of leakage of a seal for a
    brine formation during and after injection.
  • Objective 4.2 Assess the effectiveness of phase
    trapping nonwetting-phase residual saturation in
    lowering leakage risk in long term under various
    injection conditions.
  • Objective 4.3 Assess the risk of CO2 storage in
    brine reservoirs to the quality of fresh water
    resources

17
Non-wetting Residual Phase Trapping Mechanism
Land surface
Capture
gt 800 m
Injection Zone
18
Risk to Underground Sources of Drinking Water
Land surface
Capture
Underground Sources of Drinking Water
gt 800 m
Hypothesized CO2 leak path
Hypothesized Brine leak path
Injection Zone
19
Preliminary Analysis of Risk to Drinking Water
from CO2 leakage
Corrine Wong
20
Goal 5 Evaluation of Economic Potential of CO2
to Enhance Oil and Gas Recovery in the Gulf Coast
  • Objective 5.1 To create more accurate
    predictions of oil-production and CO2 usage for
    CO2 EOR floods in Gulf Coast clastic reservoirs
  • Objective 5.2 Quantify the sequestration
    potential and feasibility of enhanced gas
    recovery potential for depleted gas reservoirs in
    Texas.

21
Simplified Model Using Dimensionless Groups for
Rapid Assessment of CO2 Flooding and Storage in
Gulf Coast Reservoirs
  • Model can be applied to candidate Gulf Coast
    reservoirs in BEG database limited data on many
    reservoirs
  • Potential for use by small and big operators
    alike to quickly identify best reservoirs

Derek Wood, Larry Lake
Derek Woods Larry lake
22
Improving Economic Assessment (EOR)
Mark Holtz and others
23
Decision Tree for Screening Candidate Reservoirs
QAc4748x
24
Recovery Efficiency of Sandstone Reservoirs from
Enhanced Oil Recovery Projects (1980s)
7
Single well huff n puff
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14.5 , Paradis, LA, Texaco
4
Frequency
17, Little Creek, MS, Denbury (2004)
Quarantine Bay, LA, Chevron
3
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Recovery efficiency (percent)
25
CO2 sequestration capacity in miscible oil
reservoirs along the Gulf Coast
26
Goal 6 Development of Market Framework and
Economic Models for CO2 Capture and Storage in
the Gulf Coast
  • Objective 6.1 Provide to the GCCC partners
    scenarios and analysis of the policy options
    under consideration at the State and Federal
    levels.
  • Objective 6.2 To model possible evolutionary
    pathways for CO2 pipeline networks in the Gulf
    Coast and their impact on CO2 value chains

27
Model possible evolutionary pathways for CO2
pipeline networks in the Gulf Coast and their
impact on CO2 Value Chains
Assessment by Joseph Essandoh-Yeddu Energy
Commission, Ghana
28
Goal 7 GCCC Service and Training to Partners
  • Training tailored to sponsor requests
  • Public materials
  • Specific data sets developed for sponsors

Workshop for operators
29
Gulf Coast Carbon Center
  • www.gulfcoastcarbon.org
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