May 3, 2023
Book Chapter

Monitoring Carbon Storage Sites with Time-Lapse Gravity Surveys

Abstract

Monitoring technologies are deployed on carbon storage sites to demonstrate that the injected CO2 is contained within the storage complex during and long after the active life of the project and that the CO2 behavior is conforming to expectations. Detection of gravity variations accompanying mass redistributions in the subsurface caused by fluid movements in reservoirs provides a unique means for monitoring the dynamics of a carbon sequestration site. Time-lapse gravity surveys have a long history of effectively monitoring temporal density changes in the subsurface. However, monitoring of carbon storage sites with time-lapse gravity surveys using surface or borehole measurements remains limited, although it gained more attention during the last decade. With the recent progresses in instrument capabilities, and the increased number of fluid storage sites (e.g., wastewater, CO2, natural gas, etc.), the gravity method (with its unique ability to remotely estimate both the mass of an injected fluid and its location) has a promising future in monitoring. This chapter provides background information regarding the gravity method and discusses its modeling and application to various carbon storage sites.

Published: May 3, 2023

Citation

Appriou D., and A.H. Bonneville. 2022. Monitoring Carbon Storage Sites with Time-Lapse Gravity Surveys. In Geophysical Monitoring for Geologic Carbon Storage, edited by L. Huang. 211-232. Hoboken, New Jersey:John Wiley & Sons, Inc. PNNL-SA-135749. doi:10.1002/9781119156871.ch14