Oil & Gas Science and Technology (Apr 2015)

Risk Assessment-Led Characterisation of the SiteChar UK North Sea Site for the Geological Storage of CO2

  • Akhurst Maxine,
  • Hannis Sarah D.,
  • Quinn Martyn F.,
  • Shi Ji-Quan,
  • Koenen Marielle,
  • Delprat-Jannaud Florence,
  • Lecomte Jean-Claude,
  • Bossie-Codreanu Daniel,
  • Nagy Stanislaw,
  • Klimkowski Łukas,
  • Gei Davide,
  • Pluymaekers Maarten,
  • Long David

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2516/ogst/2015013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 70, no. 4
pp. 567 – 586

Abstract

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Risk assessment-led characterisation of a site for the geological storage of CO2 in the UK northern North Sea was performed for the EU SiteChar research project as one of a portfolio of sites. Implementation and testing of the SiteChar project site characterisation workflow has produced a ‘dry-run’ storage permit application that is compliant with regulatory requirements. A site suitable for commercial-scale storage was characterised, compatible with current and future industrial carbon dioxide (CO2) sources in the northern UK. Pre-characterisation of the site, based on existing information acquired during hydrocarbon exploration and production, has been achieved from publicly available data. The project concept is to store captured CO2 at a rate of 5 Mt per year for 20 years in the Blake Oil Field and surrounding Captain Sandstone saline aquifer. This commercial-scale storage of 100 Mt CO2 can be achieved through a storage scenario combining injection of CO2 into the oil field and concurrent water production down-dip of the field. There would be no encroachment of supercritical phase CO2 for more than two kilometres beyond the field boundary and no adverse influence on operating hydrocarbon fields provided there is pressure management. Components of a storage permit application for the site are presented, developed as far as possible within a research project. Characterisation and technical investigations were guided by an initial assessment of perceived risks to the prospective site and a need to provide the information required for the storage permit application. The emphasis throughout was to reduce risks and uncertainty on the subsurface containment of stored CO2, particularly with respect to site technical performance, monitoring and regulatory issues, and effects on other resources. The results of selected risk assessment-led site characterisation investigations and the subsequent risk reassessments are described together with their implications for the understanding of the site. Additional investigations are identified that could further reduce risks and uncertainties, and enable progress toward a full storage permit application. Permit performance conditions are presented as SiteChar-recommended useful tools for discussion between the competent authority and operator.