Using CO2 in enhanced oil recovery (CO2-EOR) is a promising
technology for emissions management because CO2-EOR can dramatically
reduce sequestration costs in the absence of emissions policies that include
incentives for carbon capture and storage. This study develops a multiscale
statistical framework to perform CO2 accounting and risk analysis in an EOR
environment at the Farnsworth Unit (FWU), Texas. A set of geostatistical-
based Monte Carlo simulations of CO2-oil/gas-water flow and transport in
the Morrow formation are conducted for global sensitivity and statistical
analysis of the major risk metrics: CO2/water injection/production rates,
cumulative net CO2 storage, cumulative oil/gas productions, and CO2
breakthrough time. The median and confidence intervals are estimated for
quantifying uncertainty ranges of the risk metrics. A response-surface-based
economic model has been derived to calculate the CO2-EOR profitability for
the FWU site with a current oil price, which suggests that approximately 31%
of the 1000 realizations can be profitable. If government carbon-tax credits are available, or the oil price goes up or CO2 capture and operating expenses reduce, more realizations would be profitable. The results from this study provide valuable insights for understanding CO2 storage potential and the corresponding environmental and economic risks of commercial-scale CO2- sequestration in depleted reservoirs.
Revised: November 8, 2020 |
Published: July 19, 2016
Citation
Dai Z., H. Viswanathan, R. Middleton, F. Pan, W. Ampomah, C. Yang, and W. Jia, et al. 2016.CO2 Accounting and Risk Analysis for CO2 Sequestration at Enhanced Oil Recovery Sites.Environmental Science & Technology 50, no. 14:7546-7554.PNNL-SA-120716.doi:10.1021/acs.est.6b01744