Reprint

Forecasting CO2 Sequestration with Enhanced Oil Recovery

Edited by
December 2022
310 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5915-5 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5916-2 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Forecasting CO2 Sequestration with Enhanced Oil Recovery that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Physical Sciences
Summary

The aim of carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) is to reduce the amount of CO2 released into the atmosphere and to mitigate its effects on climate change. Over the years, naturally occurring CO2 sources have been utilized in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) projects in the United States. This has presented an opportunity to supplement and gradually replace the high demand for natural CO2 sources with anthropogenic sources. There also exist incentives for operators to become involved in the storage of anthropogenic CO2 within partially depleted reservoirs, in addition to the incremental production oil revenues. These incentives include a wider availability of anthropogenic sources, the reduction of emissions to meet regulatory requirements, tax incentives in some jurisdictions, and favorable public relations.

The United States Department of Energy has sponsored several Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnerships (RCSPs) through its Carbon Storage program which have conducted field demonstrations for both EOR and saline aquifer storage. Various research efforts have been made in the area of reservoir characterization, monitoring, verification and accounting, simulation, and risk assessment to ascertain long-term storage potential within the subject storage complex. This book is a collection of lessons learned through the RCSP program within the Southwest Region of the United States. The scope of the book includes site characterization, storage modeling, monitoring verification reporting (MRV), risk assessment and international case studies.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
geologic CO2 sequestration; CO2 and brine leakage; underground source of drinking water; risk assessment; response surface methodology; early detection criteria; multi-objective optimization; CO2-WAG; machine learning; numerical modeling; hybrid workflows; morrow; Farnsworth; Anadarko; incised valley; geological carbon sequestration; reactive surface area; mineral trapping; enhanced oil recovery with CO2 (CO2-EOR); geochemical reactions; risk assessment; risk assessment; workflow; Farnsworth; workshop; process influence diagram; response surface model; polynomial chaos expansion; NRAP; relative permeability; geologic carbon storage; multi-phase flow simulation; life cycle analysis; CO2-enhanced oil recovery; anthropogenic CO2; global warming potential; greenhouse gas (GHG); carbon storage; CO2-EOR; CO2 sequestration; geomechanics; reservoir fluid flow modelling; tightness of caprock; CO2 leakage; threshold pressure; reactive solute transport; CO2 sequestration; multi-phase fluid flow; Farnsworth Unit; STOMP; GEM; TOUGHREACT; 4D; time lapse; CO2; EOR; WAG; sequestration; monitoring; carbon sequestration; caprock integrity; noble gas migration; seal by-pass; carbon dioxide storage; storage efficiency factor; probabilistic; expectation curve; Monte Carlo; carbon sequestration; Farnsworth Field; petroleum system modeling; CO2 migration; n/a