A phased workflow to define permit‐ready locations for large volume CO2 injection and storage

Author:

Trevino Ramon H.1,Hovorka Susan D.1ORCID,Dunlap Dallas B.1,Larson Richard C.1,Hentz Tucker F.1,Hosseini Seyyed A.1ORCID,Bhattacharya Shuvajit1,DeAngelo Michael V.1

Affiliation:

1. The University of Texas at Austin Bureau of Economic Geology Austin TX USA

Abstract

AbstractTo‐date, only two UIC Class VI permits have been issued by the US Environmental Protection Agency. We illustrate a four‐phase workflow to first identify regional storage resources and then down‐select sites to yield permit‐ready locations that can accept and store large volumes of CO2. Specific permit requirements should guide objectives and define deliverables of respective workflow phases. In the first phase we used available regional data and screened structure and injection zones to locate resources that match CO2 volumes planned to be captured. Available data were also used to assess presence and depth of usable groundwater, the key resource being protected via permitting. We then used advanced, closed‐form, analytical solutions (EASiTool) to estimate CO2 injectivity into each hydrologically connected injection compartment. In the second phase we acquired and conditioned additional wireline logs and leased available seismic datasets. We interpreted the depositional systems from wireline well‐log character and mapped sandbody geometry to interpolate injection and confining‐zone distribution. Using available data, we mapped faults and locations of freshwater and overpressure (or other capacity‐limiting geologic parameters) in more detail. In the third phase, we used the augmented geologic data to develop a static model for the selected area, extracted the areas of highest interest, and generated and ran dynamic (flow) models. In a fourth phase, we reduced major uncertainties identified in earlier phases. Our case study indicates that to complete preparation of a permit application requires (1) improved lithologic characterization information (thicknesses and horizontal and vertical connectivity) and (2) better definition of poorly defined local faults. © 2023 The Authors. Greenhouse Gases: Science and Technology published by Society of Chemical Industry and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Funder

National Energy Technology Laboratory

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Environmental Chemistry,Environmental Engineering

Reference34 articles.

1. EPA.Federal underground injection control (UIC) Class VI program for carbon dioxide (CO2) geologic sequestration (GS) wells.Washington DC: Office of the Federal Register National Archives and Records Administration;2011. p.56982–56983.

2. HovorkaSDandBarnhartT.Early stage cost of storage characterization. In:Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies (GHGT‐16); November 23 2022;Lyon France2022. p.13.

3. Common risk segment mapping: Streamlining exploration for carbon storage sites, with application to coastal Texas and Louisiana

4. Depositional systems in the Wilcox group of Texas and their relationship to occurrence of oil and gas;Fisher WL;Gulf Coast Assoc Geol Soc Trans,1967

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