4.6 Article

Towards improved monitoring of offshore carbon storage: A real-world field experiment detecting a controlled sub-seafloor CO2 release

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijggc.2020.103237

关键词

Offshore carbon storage; Carbon dioxide capture and storage (CCS); Marine field experiment; Monitoring; CO2 leakage; Attribution, detection and quantification

资金

  1. European Union [654462]
  2. UK's Natural Environmental Research Council: the SPITFIRE project [NE/L002531/1]
  3. UK's Natural Environmental Research Council: Climate Linked Atlantic Sector Science project through the single center national capability programme grant [NE/R015953/1]
  4. UK's Natural Environmental Research Council: Carbonate Chemistry Autonomous Sensor System (CarCASS) project [NE/P02081X/1]
  5. Bayesian Monitoring Design (BayMoDe) - Research Council of Norway through the CLIMIT programme [254711]
  6. Act on Offshore Monitoring (ACTOM) through the ACT programme (Accelerating CCS Technologies Project) Horizon2020 project [294766]
  7. Max Planck Society for Advancement of Science, Germany
  8. NERC [noc010013, noc010011, noc010009] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is a key technology for reducing CO2 emissions in industrial processes, and robust strategies for CO2 leakage detection, quantification, and management are crucial for safe geological CO2 storage. The STEMM-CCS project conducted a controlled CO2 release experiment in the North Sea to mimic unintended CO2 emissions from subsurface storage sites. Various techniques were used to detect, characterize, and quantify gaseous and dissolved CO2 in sediments and seawater.
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is a key technology to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from industrial processes in a feasible, substantial, and timely manner. For geological CO2 storage to be safe, reliable, and accepted by society, robust strategies for CO2 leakage detection, quantification and management are crucial. The STEMM-CCS (Strategies for Environmental Monitoring of Marine Carbon Capture and Storage) project aimed to provide techniques and understanding to enable and inform cost-effective monitoring of CCS sites in the marine environment. A controlled CO2 release experiment was carried out in the central North Sea, designed to mimic an unintended emission of CO2 from a subsurface CO2 storage site to the seafloor. A total of 675 kg of CO2 were released into the shallow sediments (similar to 3 m below seafloor), at flow rates between 6 and 143 kg/d. A combination of novel techniques, adapted versions of existing techniques, and well-proven standard techniques were used to detect, characterise and quantify gaseous and dissolved CO2 in the sediments and the overlying seawater. This paper provides an overview of this ambitious field experiment. We describe the preparatory work prior to the release experiment, the experimental layout and procedures, the methods tested, and summarise the main results and the lessons learnt.

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