1 / 19

SECARB Phase II Field Tests in Coal of the Black Warrior Basin

SECARB Phase II Field Tests in Coal of the Black Warrior Basin. Jack C. Pashin Director, Energy Investigations Program Presented by Nick Tew State Geologist. Geological Survey of Alabama. http://www.secarbon.org http://portal.gsa.state.al.us/CO2/CO2.htm. http://www.netl.doe.gov/.

kaori
Télécharger la présentation

SECARB Phase II Field Tests in Coal of the Black Warrior Basin

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SECARB Phase II Field Tests in Coal of the Black Warrior Basin Jack C. Pashin Director, Energy Investigations Program Presented by Nick Tew State Geologist Geological Survey of Alabama http://www.secarbon.org http://portal.gsa.state.al.us/CO2/CO2.htm http://www.netl.doe.gov/

  2. DOE SEQUESTRATION PROGRAM

  3. GEOLOGIC CARBON SINKS Saline aquifers Oil and gas reservoirs Coal GOALS AND BENEFITS Reduce greenhouse gas emissions Develop market-based solutions Enhance oil and gas recovery Enhance coalbed methane recovery Create and preserve jobs

  4. REGIONAL PARTNERSHIPS Hyman (2005)

  5. PRINCIPAL SPONSOR U.S. Department of Energy - NETL PROGRAM TEAM SSEB, Virginia Tech - Contractual Geological Survey of AL - Tech Lead,Geology University of Alabama - Engineering Southern Company/EPRI - MMV Mississippi State University/ICET - MMV Univ. British Columbia - Analytical Oak Ridge National Laboratory - Analytical ARI - Reservoir Simulation CCP2 - Reservoir Modeling Denbury Resources - CO2

  6. WHY COAL? CO2 capacity of 90 Gt (45 yrs) in US. CO2-ECBM potential of about 4.3 Tcm (150 Tcf) provides economic incentive. Shallow reservoir (150-1500 m) with low P&T can reduce compression cost Coal is abundant near major CO2 emission sources, such as power plants.

  7. SECARB II OBJECTIVES Assess capacity/potential of geologic sinks (saline aquifers, O&G reservoirs, coal). Conduct field tests to validate sequestration and CO2-enhanced recovery technology. Conduct MMV programs to ensure safety, environmental protection. Conduct outreach/tech transfer to facilitate commercialization/public acceptance

  8. POTTSVILLE ISOTHERMS, ALABAMA

  9. Area of Interest Power plant

  10. Blue Creek Field

  11. CBM WELL DEEP MINE

  12. CO2-ECBM TECHNICAL FEASIBILITY ALABAMA Area of Interest Sequestration > 6 Tcf ECBM = 0.6-1.2 Tcf

  13. POTTSVILLE FORMATION Cassidy 30-2-119 Blue Creek Field Tuscaloosa Co., AL

  14. PERMEABILITY-DEPTH RELATIONSHIP POTTSVILLE FM. McKee et al. (1988)

  15. RESERVOIRS AND HYDROFRACS

  16. BLACK WARRIOR PILOT SITE PLAN

  17. LI-COR SURFACE MONITORING Southern Company

  18. CAVITY RINGDOWN SPECTROMETER Surface monitoring - Isotopic analysis of 12/13C Institute for Clean Energy Technology, Mississippi State University

  19. CO2 and Alabama Coal High CO2 capacity. CO2-Enhanced Coalbed Methane Potential. Shallow reservoirs (150-1500 m) with low temperature and pressure . Coal in proximity to CO2 emission sources, i.e., power plants.

More Related