Significance of fault seal in assessing co2 storage capacity and containment risks an example from the horda platform, northern north sea

Title

Significance of fault seal in assessing co2 storage capacity and containment risks an example from the horda platform, northern north sea

Subject

Risk assessment
Carbon dioxide
Offshore oil well production
Seals
Aquifers

Description

An understanding of fault seal is crucial for assessing the storage capacity and containment risks of CO2 storage sites, as it can significantly affect the projects on across-fault and along-fault migration/leakage risk, as well as reservoir pressure predictions. We present a study from the Smeaheia area in the northern Horda Platform offshore Norway, focusing on two fault-bounded structural closures, namely the Alpha and Beta structures. We aim to use this study to improve the geological understanding of the northern Horda Platform for CO2 storage scale-up potentials and illustrate the importance of fault seal analysis in containment risk assessment and storage capacity evaluation of a CO2 storage project. Our containment risk assessment shows that the Alpha structure has low fault-related containment risks
thus, it has a potential value to be an additional storage target. The Beta structure shows larger fault-related containment risks due to juxtaposition of the prospective storage aquifer with the basement across the Oygarden Fault System. The storage capacity of Smeaheia will be determined by the long-term dynamic interplay between pressure depletion and recharging. Our study shows that across-fault pressure communication between Smeaheia and the depleting Troll reservoir is likely to be through several relay ramps of the Vette Fault System. However, Smeaheia also shows pressure-recharging potentials, such as through the subcropping areas at the Base Nordland Unconformity. The depletion observed in the newly drilled well 32/4-3S gives a good validation point for our fault seal predictions and provides valuable insights for future dynamic simulations. 2021 The Author(s).
3
27

Publisher

Petroleum Geoscience

Date

2021

Contributor

Wu, Long
Thorsen, Rune
Ottesen, Signe
Meneguolo, Renata
Hartvedt, Kristin
Ringrose, Philip
Nazarian, Bamshad

Type

journalArticle

Identifier

13540793
10.1144/petgeo2020-102

Collection

Citation

“Significance of fault seal in assessing co2 storage capacity and containment risks an example from the horda platform, northern north sea,” Lamar University Midstream Center Research, accessed May 15, 2024, https://lumc.omeka.net/items/show/25851.

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