4.6 Article

A tool for first order estimates and optimisation of dynamic storage resource capacity in saline aquifers

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijggc.2021.103258

Keywords

CO2 storage capacity; Simplified models; Resource optimization; Injectivity

Funding

  1. MESMERISECCS (Multi-scale Energy Systems Modelling Encompassing Renewable, Intermittent, Stored Energy and Carbon Capture and Storage) project - Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/M001369/1]
  2. UKCCSRC 2017 (UK Carbon Capture and Storage Research Centre 2017) project - Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/P026214/1]

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This study emphasizes the importance of carbon capture and storage in mitigating climate change, discussing the development of a methodology for dynamic assessment of storage resources under various scenarios. The CO2BLOCK tool is introduced for optimizing well design in offshore UK for storage potential analysis.
The importance of carbon capture and storage in mitigating climate change has emerged from the results of techno-economic or integrated assessment modeling, in which scenarios of future energy systems are developed subject to constraints from economic growth and climate change targets. These models rarely include limits imposed by injectivity, ultimate amounts, or the geographic distribution of storage resources. However, they could if a sufficiently simple model were available. We develop a methodology for the fast assessment of the dynamic storage resource of a reservoir under different scenarios of well numbers and interwell distance. The approach combines the use of a single-well multiphase analytical solution and the superposition of pressure responses to evaluate the pressure buildup in a multiwell scenario. The injectivity is directly estimated by means of a nonlinear relationship between flow-rate and overpressure and by imposing a limiting overpressure, which is evaluated on the basis of the mechanical parameters for failure. The methodology is implemented within a tool, named CO2BLOCK, which can optimise site design for the numbers of wells and spacing between wells. Given its small computational expense, the methodology can be applied to a large number of sites within a region. We apply this to analyse the storage potential in the offshore of the UK. We estimate that 25-250 GtCO(2) can be safely stored over an injection time interval of 30 years. We also demonstrate the use of the tool in evaluating tradeoffs between infrastructure costs and maximising injectivity at two specific sites in the offshore UK.

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