Transcript
Page 1: Geologic Sequestration

Geologic Sequestration

Geologic sequestration is the process by which CO2 is captured and stored by geologic formations.

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Geological Carbon Sequestration Options

Figure from IPCC

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Carbon Capture and Storage

http://www.climatechange.utah.gov/imagessimplifiedCCGSProcess_small.jpg

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Storage Capacity

• Oil and gas fields = 675 -900 GtCO2• Unminable coal seams = 3 – 200 GtCO2• Deep saline formations 1000 – 104 GtCO2• Basalt and shales = ?

Source: IPCC Special Report on Carbon dioxide Capture and Storage

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Carbon Capture

• Will work on large point source CO2 sources. – This means it will not work on cars, trucks etc.

• Will work by various techniques. • Currently expensive!

Four Corners Power plant (epa.gov)

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CO2 Transport

• Pipelines – These will have to connect the sources with the

sequestration sites– Many of these exist already in oilfields

http://www.nicholas.duke.edu/thegreengrok/graphics/CO2piplines-us

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http://www.isgs.illinois.edu/maps-data-pub/publications/geobits/graphics/fold-rocks.gif

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Reservoir quality• Porosity• Permeability

Photomicrographs by Peter Mozley

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Photo by Greg Smith

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Caprock (Seal) Integrity• Must have very low permeability• Understanding fractures is critical

Photo by Peter Mozley

Navajo (reservoir)

Carmel (seal)

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Challenges to Large-Scale Sequestration

• Technological– Cost of carbon capture

• Legal– Liability, regulations, pore space ownership

• Societal– CCS will add to cost of energy– Benefits of CCS are long term and hard to directly

see

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