| Authors |
R. Petrusak, SPE, S. Cyphers, SPE, S. Bumgardner, SPE, Advanced Resources
International; D. Hills, J. Pashin, Geological Survey of Alabama; R. Esposito,
Southern Company
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| Source |
SPE International Conference on CO2 Capture, Storage, and Utilization,
10-12 November 2010,
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
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| Preview |
Abstract
For large-scale carbon dioxide (CO2) injection and storage, saline formations
offer vast storage capacity, often in multiple geologic formations, or multiple
storage reservoir horizons within a single formation. Challenges for
characterizing CO2 storage reservoirs in specific saline formations may include
limited subsurface data, unproven geologic traps and lack of any production
infrastructure available for injection and monitoring operations. Active oil
fields offer advantages for CO2 sequestration in saline formations that address
such challenges. Advantages of active oil fields include proven structural
traps and reservoir seals; confirmed saline storage horizons; existing field
data including geophysical well logs, seismic data, core data, formation water
analyses and reservoir pressure tests; existing infrastructure for access and
monitoring; and potential use of CO2 in enhanced oil recovery. Such advantages
are substantial, but active oil fields can also present unique hurdles for CO2
storage in saline formations. These include old and incomplete well data and
geophysical logs; confirming the integrity of cement through the saline
formation and confining unit (if located above the oil reservoir); and
remediating existing wells.
The Southeast Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnership (SECARB) Phase III
Anthropogenic Test is a large-scale demonstration of integrated CO2 capture,
transport and storage planned for Citronelle field, in Mobile County, Alabama.1
Anthropogenic CO2 from a coal-fired electric generating plant, Alabama Power’s
Plant Barry, will be captured and transported to Citronelle field.2 During 2011
to 2014, up to 182,500 tonnes of CO2 will be injected annually into the Lower
Cretaceous Paluxy Formation, a saline formation that contains multiple
reservoir sandstones and is located above the oil reservoir. This paper
describes the initial characterization effort, which used all available field
and regional data, to build a reservoir framework for the Paluxy Formation at
Citronelle for initial assessment of injectivity, storage capacity and fate of
injected CO2. The initial characterization of the Paluxy Formation demonstrates
a successful approach for estimating key saline reservoir parameters including
porosity, permeability, sand thickness and continuity from an incomplete
existing data set in an active oil field. A robust geologic data collection
effort is planned for the CO2 injection and observation wells to be drilled at
the Anthropogenic Test site during 2011. The new data will be integrated with
the existing Paluxy data set at Citronelle field to validate, refine and expand
the initial characterization of the CO2 storage reservoir sandstones.
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