Applied Sciences (Feb 2019)

Soil-Gas Concentrations and Flux Monitoring at the Lacq-Rousse CO<sub>2</sub>-Geological Storage Pilot Site (French Pyrenean Foreland): From Pre-Injection to Post-Injection

  • Frédérick Gal,
  • Zbigniew Pokryszka,
  • Nadège Labat,
  • Karine Michel,
  • Stéphane Lafortune,
  • André Marblé

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app9040645
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
p. 645

Abstract

Read online

Soil-gas concentrations and flux were measured during 20 separate measurement campaigns at the TOTAL Lacq-Rousse carbon capture and storage (CCS) pilot site, southern France, where 51,000 tons of CO2 were injected in a depleted natural gas field. Baseline data (September 2008 to December 2009) are compared to monitoring data from the injection (March 2010 to March 2013) and post-injection (February 2014 to December 2015) periods. CO2 soil-gas concentrations varied from atmospheric concentrations to more than 16% vol. with 1.4% as median value. Summer data showed high CO2 concentrations in the soil that remained quite high during winter. Median CO2 flux at the soil/atmosphere interface was close to 4.4 cm3·min−1·m−2. Carbon-isotope ratios measured on CO2 in soil gas had a mean value of −23.5 ± 3.1‰, some deviation being due to atmospheric CO2. Comparison between different gas species and the influence of temperature, pressure and soil-water content suggest that gases in near-surface environments are produced locally and naturally, and are unrelated to CO2 ascending from the storage reservoir. Monitoring of CO2 injection and the use of threshold levels is discussed as part of a practical approach considering specific regulations for the Lacq-Rousse CCS pilot experiment and constraints for the site operator.

Keywords