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  • The Early Cretaceous Gage Sandstone and South Perth Shale formations are one of the most prospective reservoir-seal pairs in the Vlaming Sub-basin. Plays include post-breakup pinch-outs with the South Perth Shale forming a top seal. The Gage reservoir has porosities of 23-30% and permeabilities of 200-1800 mD and was deposited in palaeotopographic lows of the Valanginian breakup unconformity. This is overlain by the thick deltaic South Perth (SP) Supersequence. To characterise the reservoir-seal pair, a detailed sequence stratigraphic analysis was conducted by integrating 2D seismic interpretation, well log analysis and new biostratigraphic data. The palaeogeographic reconstructions for the Gage reservoir are based predominantly on the seismic facies mapping, whereas SP Sequence reconstructions are derived from mapping higher-order prograding sequences and establishing changes in sea level and sediment supply. The Gage reservoir forms part of a sand-rich submarine fan system and was deposited in water depths of > 400 m. It ranges from confined canyon fill to fan deposits on a basin plain. Directions of sediment supply are complex, with major sediment contributions from a northern and southern canyon adjacent to the Badaminna Fault Zone. The characteristics of the SP Supersequence differ markedly between the northern and southern parts of the sub-basin due to variations in palaeotopography and sediment supply. Palaeogeographic reconstructions reveal a series of regressions and transgressions leading to infilling of the palaeo-depression. Seven palaeogeographic reconstructions for the SP Supersequence portray a complex early post-rift depositional history in the central Vlaming Sub-basin. The developed approach could be applicable for detailed studies of other sedimentary basins

  • High-CO2 gas fields serve as important analogues for understanding various processes related to CO2 injection and storage. The chemical signatures, both within the fluids and the solid phases, are especially useful for elucidating preferred gas migration pathways and also for assessing the relative importance of mineral precipitation and/or solution trapping efficiency. In this paper, we present a high resolution study focused on the Gorgon gas field and associated Rankin Trend gases on Australia's North West Shelf. The gas data we present here display clear trends for CO2 abundance (mole %) and %- C CO2 both areally and vertically. The strong spatial variation of CO2 content and %- C and the interrelationship between the two suggests that processes were active to alter the two in tandem. We propose that these variations were driven by the precipitation of a carbonate phase, namely siderite, which is observed as a common late stage mineral. This conclusion is based on Rayleigh distillation modeling together with bulk rock isotopic analyses of core, which indicates that the late stage carbonate cements are related to the CO2 in the natural gases. The results suggest that a certain amount of CO2 may be sequestered in mineral form over short migration distances of the plume.

  • GA contribution to CO2CRC. Report describes the work done to create a PETREL model of the Naylor Field proposed injection reservoir; eighteen appendicies.

  • As part of the Australian Government National CO2 Infrastructure Plan (NCIP), Geoscience Australia is undertaking CO2 storage assessment of the Vlaming Sub-basin located offshore Western Australia in the southern Perth Basin. The Vlaming Sub-basin is a Mesozoic depocentre containing up to 14 km of sediments. Close proximity of the basin to industrial polluters in the Perth area dictates the need to find CO2 storage solutions in this basin. The main reservoir unit identified as suitable for storage of CO2 is the Early Cretaceous Gage Sandstone deposited in paleo-topographic lows of the Valanginian breakup unconformity. The reservoir unit is laterally extensive (over 1,500 km2) and over most of the area reasonably thick (100 - 300 m). It lies at depths between 1400 and 2000 m below the seafloor, which is suitable for injection of the supercritical CO2 and makes it an attractive target for the long-term storage. The reservoir unit is overlain by a thick deltaic to shallow marine succession of the South Perth Shale, which represents a regional seal in the area. Carbon Storage taskforce estimated that up 1 GT of CO2 can be stored in the Gage Sandstone. The first assessment of the Vlaming Sub-basin undertaken by CO2CRC focused on evaluation of the reservoir unit and overall storage capacity. The current study is based on interpretation and integration of the seismic, well and marine datasets, both existing and acquired since the previous assessment. It includes detailed analysis of reservoir and seal properties and a comprehensive evaluation of the seal integrity risks to allow a more accurate and realistic modeling for CO2 storage.

  • This report details the suitability of two identified sites in the Browse Basin for the geological storage of carbon dioxide: the Carbine Ponded Turbidite and the Leveque Shelf long migration dissolution trap. Detailed site assessments were completed by undertaking detailed geophysical interpretation of the top and base of each site, combined with a comprehensive structural, stratigraphic and sedimentological analysis, in order to construct a series of static 3D reservoir models for each potential storage site. These were submitted for CO2 injection simulation in order to better estimate the potential storage capacity, the potential injectivity volumes, and identify any containment-related issues of each site. Therefore this reports aims to provide technical recommendations regarding the viability of the long-term geological storage of CO2 in the Browse Basin.

  • This series of cross sections and data show the suitablility of the Sydney Basin for storage of carbon dioxide.Cartography file number 07-1825-1.

  • Sampling, prior to CO2 injection at the CO2CRC Otway Project, southeastern Victoria at the end of 2007 early 2008, provided a stocktake of the molecular and isotopic (carbon and hydrogen) compositions of the subsurface hydrocarbon and non-hydrocarbon gases (and heavier hydrocarbons) at, and in close proximity to, the injection site. This baseline study is also fundamental to the assessment of present sub-surface petroleum components as natural tracers for injected gases arriving at the monitoring well. The CO2CRC Otway Project will use the CO2-rich natural gas (containing 79% CO2 and 20% methane) from the Buttress-1 well; totalling 100,000 tons of gas injected over 2 years. This gas mixture will be injected supercritically into sandstones of the CRC-1 well below the original gas-water contact at ~2000 m in the Waarre Formation. The depleted natural gas well at Naylor-1 is the monitoring well, situated 300 m updip of the injection well. Gas from the Waarre Formation in Naylor-1 observation well contains <1% CO2, which is isotopically depleted in 13C (13C -15.8) by 9 compared to CO2 (13C -6.8) in Buttress-1. Thus the carbon isotopes of CO2 can act as a primary natural tracer for monitoring purposes. Isotopically, the minimum detection limit would result from an increase of ~20 % in the CO2 concentration at Naylor-1 from the Buttress-derived CO2. On the other hand, the carbon and hydrogen isotopes of methane, wet gases and higher hydrocarbons are very similar between Buttress-1, CRC-1 and Naylor-1, requiring addition of external conservative tracers (Boreham et al., 2007) for the monitoring of hydrocarbon components. Although the content of liquid hydrocarbons in the gases is very low (<1%), there is the potential for supercritical CO2 extraction of these high molecular weight components (e.g. black oil in the Caroline-1 CO2 gas field and solid wax at the Boggy Creek CO2 production plant) that can be either advantageous (lubrication) or detrimental (clogging) to monitoring equipment at Naylor-1. The CRC-1 well provided an opportunity to collect downhole mud gases over many formations. Maximum total hydrocarbon concentration of 0.97 % occurred in the Waarre Formation Unit C. Surprisingly, a free gas zone in the overlying Flaxmans Formation had a lower maximum concentration (0.17 %). Carbon isotopes for the hydrocarbon gases from 1907 to 2249 mRT showed little downhole variation, while the 13C CO2 averaged -16, identical to CO2 at Naylor-1. Interestingly, the condensate recovered from a MDT in the Flaxmans Formation showed depletions in 13C for the C11 to C20 n-alkanes of up to 6 for n-C15 compared to n-alkanes of oils and condensates sourced from the Eumeralla Formation of the eastern Otway Basin (Boreham et al., 2004). Water washing is suspected at CRC-1 but is not expected to be a major factor affecting hydrocarbon compositions in the short term. The results of this subsurface petroleum audit have been pivotal in demonstrating the need for the addition of external tracers, especially for the hydrocarbon components, and provide an integral part of the near-surface, soil gas and atmospheric monitoring activities of the CO2CRC Otway Project. References Boreham, C.J., Hope, J.M., Jackson, P., Davenport, R., Earl, K.L., Edwards, D.S., Logan, G.A., Krassay, A.A., 2004. Gas-oil-source correlations in the Otway Basin, southern Australia. In: Boult, P.J., Johns, D.R., Lang, S.C. (Eds.), Eastern Australasian Basins Symposium II, Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia, Special Publication, pp. 603-627. Boreham, C.J., Underschultz, J., Stalker, L., Freifeld, B., Volk, H., Perkins, E., 2007. Perdeuterated methane as a novel tracer in CO2 geosequestration. In: Farrimond, P. et al. (Eds.), The 23rd International Meeting on Organic Geochemistry, Torquay, England 9th-14th September 2007, Book of Abstracts, 713-714.

  • Atmospheric tomography is a monitoring technique that uses an array of sampling sites and a Bayesian inversion technique to simultaneously solve for the location and magnitude of a gaseous emission. Application of the technique to date has relied on air samples being pumped over short distances to a high precision FTIR Spectrometer, which is impractical at larger scales. We have deployed a network of cheaper, less precise sensors during three recent large scale controlled CO2 release experiments; one at the CO2CRC Ginninderra site, one at the CO2CRC Otway Site and another at the Australian Grains Free Air CO2 Enrichment (AGFACE) facility in Horsham, Victoria. The purpose of these deployments was to assess whether an array of independently powered, less precise, less accurate sensors could collect data of sufficient quality to enable application of the atmospheric tomography technique. With careful data manipulation a signal suitable for an inversion study can be seen. A signal processing workflow based on results obtained from the atmospheric array deployed at the CO2CRC Otway experiment is presented.

  • In 2008, the Australian Parliament debated and passed the first national legislation to establish a title system of access and property rights for greenhouse gas (CO2) storage in offshore waters - the Offshore Petroleum and Greenhouse Gas Storage Act 2006 (the Act). The Act provides for petroleum titles and greenhouse gas storage titles to coexist. To manage possible interactions between petroleum and CO2 storage operations, the Act introduced a test to determine whether activities under one title would pose a significant risk of a significant adverse impact (SROSAI test) on pre-existing rights and assets under the other title. Where petroleum and CO2 storage projects are proposed in the same area, the Act provides for commercial agreements between petroleum and CO2 storage proponents. It is only in the absence of any such commercial agreements that the regulator will have to decide whether an activity under one title would pose a significant risk of a significant adverse impact on the operations within the other title area. The SROSAI test is based on three core parameters: - the probability of the occurrence of an adverse impact; - the cost of the adverse impact on the project; and - the total resource value of the project. In estimating the cost of an adverse impact the regulator will take into consideration whether the adverse impact will result in: - any increase in capital or operating costs; - any reduction in rate of recovery of petroleum or rate of injection of CO2; - any reduction in the quantity of the petroleum to be recovered or CO2 stored. Safety and environmental impacts would be considered in estimating costs, only if those impacts would contribute to an increase in capital or operating costs, or reduction in petroleum recovery or CO2 injection. Etc