carbon dioxide
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The Australian Government is developing enabling legislation that will underpin the development of safe and secure geological storage of greenhouse gases in Australia's offshore waters. The proposed legislation will facilitate the release of acreage for the identification and use of geological storage formations by industry proponents. A current proposal is that the release of the areas will be modelled on Australia's current system for the release of offshore petroleum acreage. This paper addresses the technical, policy, social, commercial, regulatory and economic issues to be considered in selecting areas to be released for geological storage in Australian offshore areas. Prospectivity for geological storage formations is the primary criterion for selection, and release areas will typically be defined on the basis of regional assessments. The paper briefly reviews the GEODISC program and its outcomes, and discusses the availability and limitations of other geological data used to support site selection. Regional examples of possible migration paths will be considered, and their impact on area boundaries, in conjunction with the licensing requirements of the proposed legislation. Source-sink matching is addressed, together with a discussion on the potential interactions with petroleum resources. Please Note: As at the submission date for abstracts, policy for geological storage in areas under the jurisdiction of the Australian Government is awaiting endorsement by the current Government. At this time, the abstract can therefore only consider issues relating to exploration acreage release in a universal manner, rather than specifically. If enabling legislation is passed, more specific examples of acreage selection may be provided, together with details of the legislative and regulatory constraints. The content of the paper is therefore dependent on the status of the legislation and release process at the time the paper is submitted.
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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.
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This publication is the successor to Oil and Gas Resources of Australia 2001 and continues as the definitive reference on exploration, development and production of Australia's petroleum resources. OGRA 2002 provides the background for much of the advice on petroleum resources given to the Australian Government.
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In this paper, we present a high resolution study focussed mainly on the Gorgon field and associated Rankin Trend gas fields, Carnarvon Basin, Australia (Figure 1). These gas fields are characterized by numerous stacked reservoirs with varying CO2 contents and provide a relevant natural laboratory for characterizing CO2 migration, dissolution and reaction by looking at chemical characteristics of the different reservoirs (Figure 2). The data we present reveal interesting trends for CO2 mol% and -13C both spatially and with each other as observed by Edwards et al. (2007). Our interpretation of the data suggests that mineral carbonation in certain fields can be significant and relatively rapid. The Gorgon and Rankin Trend fields natural gases may therefore be a unique natural laboratory, which give further insights into the rates and extent of carbonate mineral sequestration as applied to carbon storage operations.
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The economics of the storage of CO2 in underground reservoirs in Australia have been analysed as part of the Australian Petroleum Cooperative Research Centre's GEODISC program. The analyses are based on cost estimates generated by a CO2 storage technical / economic model developed at the beginning of the GEODISC project. They also rely on data concerning the characteristics of geological reservoirs in Australia. The uncertainties involved in estimating the costs of such projects are discussed and the economics of storing CO2 for a range of CO2 sources and potential storage sites across Australia are presented. The key elements of the CO2 storage process and the methods involved in estimating the costs of CO2 storage are described and the CO2 storage costs for a hypothetical but representative storage project in Australia are derived. The effects of uncertainties inherent in estimating the costs of storing CO2 are shown. The analyses show that the costs are particularly sensitive to parameters such as the CO2 flow rate, the distance between the source and the storage site, the physical properties of the reservoir and the market prices of equipment and services. Therefore, variations in any one of these inputs can lead to significant variation in the costs of CO2 storage. Allowing for reasonable variations in all the inputs together in a Monte Carlo simulation of any particular site, then a large range of total CO2 storage costs is possible. The effect of uncertainty for the hypothetical representative storage site is illustrated. The impact of storing other gases together with CO2 is analysed. The other gases include methane, hydrogen sulphide, nitrogen, nitrous oxides and oxides of sulphur, all of which potentially could be captured together with CO2. The effect on storage costs when varying quantities of other gases are injected with the CO2 is shown. Based on the CO2 storage estimates and the published costs capturing CO2 from industrial processes, the econ
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In mid 2011 the Australian Government announced funding of a new four year National CO2 Infrastructure Plan (NCIP) to accelerate the identification and development of sites suitable for the long term storage of CO2 in Australia that are within reasonable distances of major energy and industrial CO2 emission sources. The NCIP program promotes pre-competitive storage exploration and provides a basis for the development of transport and storage infrastructure. The Plan follows on from recommendations from the Carbon Storage Taskforce and the National CCS Council (formerly, the National Low Emissions Coal Council). It builds on the work funded under the National Low Emissions Coal Initiative and the need for adequate storage to be identified as a national priority. Geoscience Australia is providing strategic advice in delivering the plan and will lead in the acquisition of pre-competitive data. Four offshore sedimentary basins (Bonaparte, Browse, Perth and Gippsland basins) and several onshore basins have been identified for pre-competitive data acquisition and study. The offshore Petrel Sub-basin is located in Bonaparte Basin, in NW Australia, has been identified as a potential carbon storage hub for CO2 produced as a by-product from future LNG processing associated with the development of major gas accumulations on the NW Shelf. The aim of the project is to determine if the sub-basin is suitable for long-term storage, and has the potential capacity to be a major storage site. The project began in June 2011 and will be completed by July 2013. As part of the project, new 2D seismic data will be acquired in an area of poor existing seismic coverage along the boundary of the two Greenhouse Gas Assessment Areas, which were released in 2009.
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In July 2010 Geoscience Australia and CSIRO Marine & Atmospheric Research jointly commissioned a new atmospheric composition monitoring station (' Arcturus') in central Queensland. The facility is designed as a proto-type remotely operated `baseline monitoring station' such as could be deployed in areas that are likely targets for commercial scale carbon capture and geological storage (CCS). It is envisaged that such a station could act as a high quality reference point for later in-fill, site based, atmospheric monitoring associated with geological storage of CO2. The station uses two wavelength scanned cavity ringdown instruments to measure concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), water vapour and the isotopic signature (?13C) of CO2. Meteorological parameters such as wind speed and wind direction are also measured. In combination with CSIRO's TAPM (The Air Pollution Model), data will be used to understand the local variations in CO2 and CH4 and the contributions of natural and anthropogenic sources in the area to this variability. The site is located in a region that supports cropping, grazing, cattle feedlotting, coal mining and gas production activities, which may be associated with fluxes of CO2 and CH4. We present in this paper some of the challenges found during the installation and operation of the station in a remote, sub-tropical environment and how these were resolved. We will also present the first results from the site coupled with preliminary modelling of the relative contribution of large point source anthropogenic emissions and their contribution to the background.
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CO2CRC Project 1 - Site Specific Studies for Geological Storage of carbon Dioxide Part 1: Southeast Queensland CO2 Storage Sites - Basin Desk-top, Geological Interpretation and Reservoir Simulation of Regional Model
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Between March 2008 and August 2009, 65,445 tonnes of ~75 mol% CO2 gas were injected in a depleted natural gas reservoir approximately 2000 m below surface at the Otway project site in Victoria, Australia. Groundwater flow and composition were monitored biannually in 2 near-surface aquifers between June 2006 and March 2011, spanning the pre-, syn- and post-injection periods. The shallow (~0-100 m), unconfined, porous and karstic aquifer of the Port Campbell Limestone and the deeper (~600-900 m), confined and porous aquifer of the Dilwyn Formation contain valuable fresh water resources. Groundwater levels in either aquifer have not been affected by the drilling, pumping and injection activities that were taking place, or by the precipitation increase observed during the project. In terms of groundwater composition, the Port Campbell Limestone groundwater is fresh (electrical conductivity = 801-3900 ?S/cm), cool (temperature = 12.9-22.5 °C), and near-neutral (pH 6.62-7.45), whilst the Dilwyn Formation groundwater is fresher (electrical conductivity 505-1473 ?S/cm), warmer (temperature = 42.5-48.5 °C), and more alkaline (pH 7.43-9.35). Evapotranspiration and carbonate dissolution control the composition of the groundwaters. Comparing the chemical and isotopic composition of the groundwaters collected before, during and after injection shows either no sign of statistically significant changes or, where they are statistically significant, changes that are generally opposite those expected if CO2 addition had taken place. The monitoring program demonstrates that the physical and chemical integrity of the groundwater resources has been preserved in the area.
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The first large-scale projects for geological storage of carbon dioxide on the Australian mainland are likely to occur within sedimentary sequences that underlie or are within the Triassic-Cretaceous, Great Artesian Basin (GAB) aquifer sequence. Recent national1 and state2 assessments have concluded that certain deep formations within the GAB show considerable geological suitability for the storage of greenhouse gases. These same formations contain trapped methane and naturally generated CO2 stored for millions of years. In July 2010, the Queensland government released exploration permits for Greenhouse Gas Storage in the Surat and Galilee basins.An important consideration in assessing the potential economic, environmental, health and safety risks of such projects is the potential impact CO2 migrating out of storage reservoirs could have on overlying groundwater resources. The risk and impact of CO2 migrating from a greenhouse gas storage reservoir into groundwater cannot be objectively assessed without knowledge of the natural baseline characteristics of the groundwater within these systems. Due to the phase behaviour of CO2, geological storage of carbon dioxide in the supercritical state requires depths greater than 800m, but there are few hydrogeochemical studies of these deeper aquifers in the prospective storage areas. Historical hydrogeochemical data are compiled from various State and Federal Government agencies. In addition, hydrogeochemical information is compiled from thousands of petroleum well completion reports in order to obtain more information on the deeper aquifers, not typically used for agriculture or human consumption. The data are passed through a QC procedure to check for mud contamination and to ascertain whether a representative sample had been collected. The large majority of the samples proved to be contaminated but a small selection passed the QC criteria. The full dataset is available for download from GA's Virtual Dataroom. Oral presentation at "Groundwater 2010" Conference, 31 October - 4 November 2010, Canberra