1887
Volume 37, Issue 1
  • ISSN: 0812-3985
  • E-ISSN: 1834-7533

Abstract

Injection of CO into underground saline formations, due to their large storage capacity, is probably the most promising approach for the reduction of CO emissions into the atmosphere. CO storage must be carefully planned and monitored to ensure that the CO is safely retained in the formation for periods of at least thousands of years. Seismic methods, particularly for offshore reservoirs, are the primary tool for monitoring the injection process and distribution of CO in the reservoir over time provided that reservoir properties are favourable. Seismic methods are equally essential for the characterisation of a potential trap, determining the reservoir properties, and estimating its capacity. Hence, an assessment of the change in seismic response to CO storage needs to be carried out at a very early stage. This must be revisited at later stages, to assess potential changes in seismic response arising from changes in fluid properties or mineral composition that may arise from chemical interactions between the host rock and the CO. Thus, carefully structured modelling of the seismic response changes caused by injection of CO into a reservoir over time helps in the design of a long-term monitoring program. For that purpose we have developed a Graphical User Interface (GUI) driven rock physics simulator, designed to model both short and long-term 4D seismic responses to injected CO. The application incorporates CO phase changes, local pressure and temperature changes, chemical reactions and mineral precipitation. By incorporating anisotropic Gassmann equations into the simulator, the seismic response of faults and fractures reactivated by CO can also be predicted.

We show field examples (potential CO sequestration sites offshore and onshore) where we have tested our rock physics simulator. 4D seismic responses are modelled to help design the monitoring program.

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/content/journals/10.1071/EG06067
2006-03-01
2026-01-14
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  • Article Type: Research Article
Keyword(s): CO2 sequestration; rock physics; seismic response

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