A Review of Key Challenges and Evaluation of Well Integrity in CO2 Storage: Insights from Texas Potential CCS Fields
Abstract
1. Introduction
- A proven history of safely containing hydrocarbons for millions of years,
- A well-characterized geology, with data available on porosity, permeability, and caprock integrity, reducing the uncertainty associated with other storage options [10].
- Ease of monitoring due to proven caprock and existing wells [14].
2. Review of Legacy Well Problems
3. Wellbore Integrity in Downhole Conditions
3.1. Cement Integrity in CO2-Rich Environments
Author | Experiment/Study | Variables Tested | Conditions | Key Observations |
---|---|---|---|---|
[53] | Effect of curing conditions on integrity | Curing temperature, pressure, time | 50 °C, 30.3 MPa vs. 22 °C, 0.1 MPa | Cement cured under higher-temperature and pressure conditions showed better resistance to CO2-induced degradation. |
[55] | Carbonation front penetration | Time | 44 h to 6 weeks | Carbonation depth increased from 1 to 2 mm to ~7 mm. |
[58] | Accelerated carbonation testing | Voltage application (electrophoresis) | 10–50 V | Simulated long-term CO2 exposure, revealing depth differences between cathode and anode. |
[59] | Effect of SCCO2 exposure on wellbore cement integrity. | SCCO2 injection duration, pressure gradient, and temperature | 54 °C, 19.9 MPa, 0.7 MPa pressure gradient for 99 days after 14 days of brine saturation | Cement exposed to SCCO2 showed significant carbonation with reduced porosity (from 37.8% to 23.8%) and mass increase (19.6%). The carbonation extended ~5 mm into the cement core, forming calcite, aragonite, and vaterite, with improved sealing properties due to crystal growth in fractures. |
[22] | Cement Degradation in Sandstone Brine | Brine composition, pH, Temperature | pH 2.4–3.7, Temp 20–50 °C | Rapid degradation of outer layers in Class H cement. |
[60] | Effect of CO2-rich brine on cement integrity | CO2-rich brine exposure, temperature, pressure, and reaction duration | 60 °C, 3 MPa pCO2, 8 days of flow-through experiments | Distinct reaction zones formed, reducing Young’s modulus by 75%, 64%, and 34% in depleted, carbonate, and amorphous layers, respectively. |
[61] | Effect of flow rate and initial aperture on fractured cement | Flow rate, initial fracture aperture | 60 °C; 10 MPa; flow rates: 0.05–2 mL/min; apertures: 7–43 µm; duration: 6–28 h | Permeability varied with flow rate and fracture aperture, stabilizing initially before dissolution, and precipitation altered flow. |
[62] | Effect of CO2-rich brine on fractured cement | Flow rate, fracture aperture, residence time | pH ~3.9, flow rate 0.0083 cm3/s, fractured cement length 224.8 mm | Permeability decreased by 50%, with fracture self-healing driven by mineral precipitation. Small apertures and longer residence times promoted fracture closure and flow restriction. |
[63] | Effect of CO2 and CO2-saturated brine on wellbore cement | Exposure to SCCO2, CO2-saturated brine, or both | 50 °C, 10 MPa, 0.5 M NaCl brine, 56 days | Cement carbonation reached only a few millimeters, with minimal steel casing alteration. The stimated alteration depths for 30 years were 4.6 mm (SCCO2) and 2.1 mm (CO2-saturated brine), consistent with field data. |
[64] | Effect of CO2-rich brine on fractured class-G cement | Fracture aperture, flow rate, hydrodynamic conditions | 60 °C, 10 MPa, CO2 partial pressure 2.3 MPa, flow rate 100 μL/min, average aperture 14 μm | Cement showed intense mass removal, but permeability increase was mitigated by Si-rich precipitation. Low-aperture zones self-healed via calcite precipitation, while high-aperture zones developed persistent flow paths. |
[54] | Effect of CO2-rich brine on well cement in depleted reservoirs | Depth, confining pressure, permeability | API Class G cement, simulated conditions of the Goldeneye reservoir (North Sea) | Permeability increased with depth, ranging from 2.06 × 10−21 m2 at 1296 m to 1.17 × 10−20 m2 at 2560 m, indicating the risk of leakage in deep abandoned wells. |
[65] | Effect of CO2-rich rich brine on cement reservoir rock composite | Porosity, permeability, mechanical properties, ion concentration | Simulated deep wellbore environments, long-term CO2-rich brine exposure | Permeability increased by an order of magnitude due to sandstone alteration, while mechanical properties (Young’s modulus and Poisson’s ratio) decreased. No significant changes in porosity were observed. |
[66] | Effect of temperature and vapor on cement carbonation | Temperature (20–300 °C), relative humidity, water-to-cement ratio | Liquid water, varying vapor content, carbonation duration of 1 h | Carbonation rate increased significantly at high temperatures with liquid water. High carbonation speed correlated with the formation of metastable calcium carbonate, influenced by vapor content and hydration products. |
[67] | Effect of scCO2 on Portland cement integrity | Exposure duration (2–5 weeks), pore size, tortuosity | 65 °C, 20.7 MPa, scCO2 exposure | Cement porosity decreased from 37% to 33%, with increased tortuosity (6× after 2 weeks, 3× after 5 weeks). Smaller pores (<30 nm) showed carbonate dissolution, while larger pores (30–200 nm) exhibited both precipitation and dissolution, limiting scCO2 migration. |
Impact of Fluid Transport, Fracture Behavior, and Self-Sealing Mechanisms on Cement Integrity
3.2. Casing Integrity for CO2-Exposed Wells
4. Causes of Cement Defects
4.1. Cyclic Pressure and Temperature Changes
4.2. Cement Hardening and Shrinkage
4.3. Fluid Driven Debonding
4.4. Well Design and Other Operational Activities
5. Wellbore Integrity Evaluation
5.1. Sustained Casing Pressure
Aspect | FutureGen Risk Analysis | Sustained Casing Pressure (SCP) Data |
---|---|---|
Approach | Risk assessment based on well failure events per year | Observations of pressure build-up within well casings (SCP) |
Leak Rates | High-rate (e.g., 11,000 metric tons/year) and low-rate (e.g., 200 metric tons/year) | Observed leak rates and effective permeabilities, typically lower |
Frequency | 1 in 1000 well-years (oil and gas wells) or 1 in 100,000 well-years (CO2 wells) | Frequency of SCP in wells, such as percentage of wells with SCP |
Conceptual Model | Discrete events with wells either leaking significantly or not at all | Continuous spectrum of leakage potential from negligible to moderate |
Permeability Calculation | Derived from assumed leak rates, pressure differences, and other parameters | Derived directly from observed pressure and flow rates |
Risk Representation | Focus on discrete high and low leakage events | Continuous spectrum of leakage potential based on observed data |
Data Sources | Analogs from natural gas storage and other studies | Direct observations of well performance in specific regions |
Leakage Magnitude | Includes scenarios with very high leak rates | Typically shows lower effective permeabilities and leak rates |
Probability and Impact | Low probability of significant leakage events but potentially high impacts | More frequent, smaller-scale leakage with cumulative impact potential |
Author | Description |
---|---|
[122] | Analyzed surface casing vent flow (SCVF) and gas migration (GM) to assess CO2 storage leakage risks, correlating leakage with factors like economic activity, regulatory changes, and well conditions. |
[140] | Incorporated SCP field observations, transport properties, and CO2 flux estimation under varying conditions. |
[139] | Assessed global datasets on well barrier and integrity failure across various countries, analyzing failure rates and factors influencing well integrity in both conventional and unconventional reservoirs, with a focus on abandoned, orphaned, and active wells. |
[134] | Analyzed surface casing pressure (SfCP) data to evaluate well integrity in Colorado’s Wattenberg Field, developing a critical SfCP criterion to assess the risk of stray gas migration, with findings showing that newer wells with deeper surface casings pose lower risks. |
[138] | Developed a methodology to analyze the frequency and permeability of defective wells in CO2 storage sites using bimodal log-normal distributions to estimate leakage risks, highlighting the need for further data to improve accuracy. |
[141] | Developed numerical models to analyze the process of sustained casing pressure (SCP) and study cement integrity collapse, providing solutions like optimizing cement properties and using self-healing cement to mitigate SCP and improve well integrity. |
[144] | Developed the first onshore modeling framework for sustained casing pressure (SCP) and surface casing vent flow (SCVF) in wells with open annuli, linking gas migration and leakage behavior to SCP/SCVF to better estimate methane leakage and support regulatory actions. |
[142] | Developed a temperature-based SCP model for deepwater wells, integrating thermal elastic mechanics and formation fluid infiltration, and proposed an SCP relief tool to reduce pressure in annuli, improving casing integrity by up to 30%. |
[143] | Developed a prediction model for sustained casing pressure (SCP) by integrating gas migration, experimentally validating the model, and analyzing the effects of tubing leakage and liquid density on SCP balance and recovery rates in high-pressure gas wells. |
Author | Well Type | Case | Method of Spotting Leakage | How They Solved It? | Innovation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[145] | V | Fully cemented annulus | Noise and cement bond log | milling a 25-foot window in the 9 5/8” casing to access the microchannels behind the cement. They then injected 3.2 bbl of thermosetting resin under 4500 psi pressure over 8 h, sealing the channels and successfully eliminating the sustained pressure | Thermosetting resin has low viscosity, deep penetration, adjustable curing time, and resistance to water contamination. |
[145] | V | Two fully cemented annulus | Logging results, and confirmed when perforating the casings equalizing the sustained pressure between both annuli | injected 2.7 bbl of thermosetting resin through the perforations at 2000 psi pressure over a 7.5 h gel time, sealing the channels in the 9 5/8”, 13 3/8”, and 18 5/8” casing strings, successfully eliminating the pressure build-up in both annuli | |
[145] | V | B-annulus treatment | The leakage in the B-annulus was identified through gas returns during each pressure bleed-off, indicating gas migration through microchannels in the cement behind the 9 5/8” casing. | used a 94 pcf density resin with a 4 h gel time, allowing 11 bbl of resin to settle by gravity to the top of the cement at 4920 ft MD. Pressure of 530–550 psi was applied for 4 h, sealing the gas migration channels | |
[136] | V | Intermediate casing | gas source was further identified using gas composition analysis, isotopic fingerprinting, and noise and temperature logging, | Since the source was the shallow sweet gas with low risk, the well was temporarily plugged and abandoned (P&A) for future utility, lowering the risk level from high to medium | its integrated multi-disciplinary approach combining gas composition analysis, isotopic fingerprinting, pressure profiles, and noise and temperature logging to accurately diagnose gas sources in wells with sustained casing pressure, enabling tailored risk assessments and remediation strategies in high-risk sour gas environments |
[136] | V | 2nd intermediate casing | gas composition analysis, isotope fingerprinting, and pressure profile analysis, pointed to deep sour gas migration as the source. This was confirmed by noise and temperature logging, which indicated gas migration below the shallow gas perforations. | Due to the high risk from the corrosive deep sour gas containing H2S, the well was permanently plugged and abandoned (P&A) to isolate the sour and sweet gas layers and eliminate the risk | |
[146] | Sustained Annulus Pressure (SAP) buildup that frequently occurred after hydraulic fracturing operations, causing significant well integrity issues. | using the Enhanced Cement Integrity System (ECIS) during the well design phase. In a 16-well hydraulic fracturing campaign, they used ECIS in the perforated intervals of each well. The results showed an 80% reduction in SAP buildup, with only 1 out of 16 wells experiencing SAP, leading to cost savings of over 2 million USD in this campaign | The innovation of this paper is the Elastomeric Cement Integrity Sleeve (ECIS), a fluid-reactive, self-sealing elastomer that prevents sustained annular pressure (SAP) by sealing micro-annuli in wells, offering a simple, cost-effective solution that reduces remedial operations and enhances long-term well integrity | ||
[147] | V | Cement Bond Log (CBL) and Sonic Noise Log (SNL) | Perf, Wash & Cement (PWC) technique was applied, improving the cement bond and providing a reliable seal across the cap rocks, as verified by post-operation CBL. | The PWC method enhanced the cement bond, successfully addressing leakage issues and improving well integrity in abandonment operations. | |
[147] | high pressure in the B annulus, nearing the Maximum Allowable Annular Surface Pressure (MAASP) | mechanical casing expander was deployed to create internal dents in the casing, improving zonal isolation by sealing micro-annuli and mitigating fluid leaks. | casing expander technology reduced B-annulus pressure by 88%, providing a mechanical solution to improve zonal isolation | ||
[148] | The presence of sustained casing pressure (SCP), ranging between 300 and 400 psi, was observed post-repair, indicating communication issues due to casing leaks. | Presence of sustained casing pressure | A new generation of adaptive cement system was applied, delivered through coiled tubing for optimal placement in the problematic zone to seal the leaks. | The use of an adaptive cement system allowed for improved long-term remediation compared to conventional cement systems, offering better control over annular communication and reducing SCP recurrence. |
5.2. Risk Assessment
Model Type | Example Studies | Best Use Cases | Strengths |
---|---|---|---|
Qualitative (Risk Matrix, Register, FEPs, Index/scoring Based models) | [32,153,154,159] |
|
|
Probabilistic/Semi-Quantitative Models | [158,159,160] |
|
|
Quantitative and Simulation-Based Models (e.g., Drift-Flux, T2WELL, TOUGH2, FEM) | [153,165,166,167,180] |
|
|
Reduced Order Models (ROM) | [169,174] |
|
|
Hybrid (Numerical + Experimental) | [181,182] |
|
|
Integrated Frameworks (Qualitative + Quantitative) | [149,183] |
|
|
6. Conclusions
- Field cement degradation analysis is limited to situations of re-entering and side coring in the well. Only one field study across the US has been conducted in the last 15 years.
- A study to identify fields with similar geological and geographical characteristics across the US is needed to utilize data-rich field analysis and obtain results on limited-data fields.
- Experimental work is needed to answer the following: does the presence of a second casing–cement layer significantly reduce leakage probability?
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CCI | Casing–Cement Interface |
CFI | Casing–Formation Interface |
SCC | Stress Corrosion Cracking |
SCVF | Sustained Casing Vent Flow |
GM | Gas Migration |
CBL | Casing Bond Log |
VDL | Variable-Density Log |
AOI | Area of Interest |
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Category | Criteria/Property |
---|---|
Geological Factors | Reservoir Depth: 800–3000 m for CO2 supercritical state |
Porosity and Permeability: High values for capacity and injectivity | |
Caprock Integrity: Robust, impermeable seal to prevent CO2 escape | |
Trapping Mechanisms: Structural, stratigraphic, residual, solubility, mineral trapping | |
Technical Factors | Injectivity: Efficient injection without fracturing |
Storage Capacity: Adequate volume for projected CO2 amounts | |
Monitoring and Verification: Capability to track CO2 plume and verify containment | |
Environmental Factors | Potential Leakage Pathways: Identification and mitigation of leakage risks |
Impact on Ecosystems: Assessment of risks to local ecosystems and biodiversity | |
Economic Factors | Proximity to CO2 Sources: Shorter distances lower transportation costs |
Regulatory and Legal Framework: Adherence to applicable regulations | |
Cost of Implementation: Overall economic viability and cost-effectiveness |
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Eissa, B.; Watson, M.; Arbad, N.; Emadi, H.; Thiyagarajan, S.; Baig, A.R.; Shahin, A.; Abdellatif, M. A Review of Key Challenges and Evaluation of Well Integrity in CO2 Storage: Insights from Texas Potential CCS Fields. Sustainability 2025, 17, 5911. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17135911
Eissa B, Watson M, Arbad N, Emadi H, Thiyagarajan S, Baig AR, Shahin A, Abdellatif M. A Review of Key Challenges and Evaluation of Well Integrity in CO2 Storage: Insights from Texas Potential CCS Fields. Sustainability. 2025; 17(13):5911. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17135911
Chicago/Turabian StyleEissa, Bassel, Marshall Watson, Nachiket Arbad, Hossein Emadi, Sugan Thiyagarajan, Abdel Rehman Baig, Abdulrahman Shahin, and Mahmoud Abdellatif. 2025. "A Review of Key Challenges and Evaluation of Well Integrity in CO2 Storage: Insights from Texas Potential CCS Fields" Sustainability 17, no. 13: 5911. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17135911
APA StyleEissa, B., Watson, M., Arbad, N., Emadi, H., Thiyagarajan, S., Baig, A. R., Shahin, A., & Abdellatif, M. (2025). A Review of Key Challenges and Evaluation of Well Integrity in CO2 Storage: Insights from Texas Potential CCS Fields. Sustainability, 17(13), 5911. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17135911