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International Conference on Health, Safety and Environment in Oil and Gas Exploration and Production,
11-13 September 2012,
Perth, Australia
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Abstract
Total is committed to reducing the impact of its activities on the environment,
especially its greenhouse gas emissions. The group’s priorities are to improve
the energy efficiency of its industrial facilities, to reduce the flaring of
associated gas, to invest
in the development of complementary energy sources (biomass, solar, clean coal)
and to participate in many operational and R&D programs on CO2 capture,
transport and geological storage. It has been involved in CO2 injection and
geological storage for over 15 years, in Canada (Weyburn oil field) for EOR and
Norway (Sleipner, Snohvit) for aquifer storage. In 2006, the company decided to
invest 60 million euros to experiment CO2 capture, transportation and injection
in a depleted gas
reservoir. The pilot in the Lacq basin, SW France, 800 km from Paris, has been
on stream since January 2010. The experimental plant is unique in several
respects; by its size (unprecedented worldwide), capturing carbon through a
30-
MWth oxy-combustion gas boiler, by the choice of a depleted deep gas reservoir
(unprecedented in Europe) located onshore 5 kilometers south of the
agglomeration of Pau (around 140,000 inhabitants) and by its scope, operating a
fully integrated
industrial chain (comprising extraction, treatment, combustion of natural gas,
High-pressure steam production, CO2 capture, transport and injection) on the
SEVESO-classified Lacq industrial complex. The pilot installations were
designed by the Total E&P Research and Development team and are operated by
Total Exploration Production France. The project reflects Total’s commitment to
mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. A dedicated plan was devised with the French
authorities to monitor the integrity of the injection site and confirm that the
CO2 remains trapped in its host reservoir. Its main objectives are to check
that no CO2 is leaking upward out of the reservoir though either the injection
well or the cap rock, so as to avoid any impact on the groundwater and surface
water resources, the biosphere (Fauna and Flora) or human health. This paper
details the main technical features of the pilot and the monitoring program
spanning subsurface and surface aspects, together with the operational feedback
after more than two and half years of operation. Based on the pilot’s
performance to date, Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) appears to hold
promise for use on an industrial scale. This industrial operation will capture
and trap around 90,000 tonnes of Carbon dioxide over a 3 and half year
period.This quantity is equivalent to the exhaust emissions of 30,000 cars over
a 2-year period.
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