4.7 Article

Gas hydrate distribution and carbon sequestration through coupled microbial methanogenesis and silicate weathering in the Krishna-Godavari Basin, offshore India

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue -, Pages 233-253

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2014.08.020

Keywords

Gas hydrate; Silicate weathering; Methanogenesis; Carbon sequestration

Funding

  1. Oil Industry Development Board
  2. Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Ltd.
  3. GAIL (India) Ltd.
  4. Oil India Ltd.
  5. NGHP: MoPNG
  6. DGH
  7. ONGC
  8. GAIL
  9. OIL
  10. NIO
  11. NIOT
  12. RIL
  13. U.S. Department of Energy-National Energy Technology Laboratory (DOE-NETL)

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The National Gas Hydrate Program Expedition 01 cored ten sites in the Krishna-Godavari basin, located on the southeastern margin of India. A comprehensive suite of pore water solute concentrations and isotope ratios were analyzed to investigate the distribution and concentration of gas hydrate along the margin, in situ diagenetic and metabolic reactions, and fluid migration and flow pathways. Gas hydrate was present at all of the sites cored, and in situ microbial methanogenesis leads to estimates of depth-integrated average gas hydrate saturations that are typically <5%. Deep-sourced fluid and gas migration produces gas hydrate saturations up to 68% along an isolated coarser-grained stratigraphic horizon at Site 15 and up to 41% within a fractured clay-dominated system at Site 10. Our results show that the CO2 produced through net microbial methanogenesis is effectively neutralized by silicate weathering throughout the sediment column drilled at each site (similar to 100-300 m), buffering the pore water pH and generating excess alkalinity via the same reaction sequence as continental silicate weathering. Most of the excess alkalinity produced by silicate weathering in the Krishna-Godavari basin is sequestered in Caand Fe-carbonates as a result of ubiquitous calcium release from weathering detrital silicates and dissolved Fe production within the methanogenic sediments. Formation of secondary hydrous silicates (e.g. smectite) related to incongruent primary silicate dissolution acts as a significant sink for pore water Mg, K, Li, Rb, and B. The consumption of methane through anaerobic oxidation of methane, sequestration of methane in gas hydrate, and sequestration of dissolved inorganic carbon in authigenic carbonates keeps methanogenesis as a thermodynamically feasible catabolic pathway. Our results combined with previous indications of silicate weathering in anoxic sediments in the Sea of Okhotsk, suggest that silicate weathering coupled to microbial methanogenesis should be occurring in continental margins worldwide, providing a net sink of atmospheric CO2. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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