碳捕获和储存

二氧化碳储存羽流的规律就是不规律

对于设计二氧化碳储存地点的人来说,一个关键挑战是预测注入的气体将流向何处。唯一确定的赌注之一是假设任何看起来对称的气体羽流模型都可能是错误的。

jpt_22_co2_plume_model.JPG
由于地层起伏特征带来的不确定性,拟议的二氧化碳注入储层的两个模型最终被忽略。
资料来源:能源与环境研究中心 (EERC)。

一般来说,在评估二氧化碳 (CO 2 ) 注入地层后的行为模型时,请注意“看起来像夹心蛋糕的地质模型”。

这一建议是由北达科他大学能源与环境研究中心 (EERC) 综合地下项目助理主任阿曼达·利弗斯·道格拉斯 (Amanda Livers-Douglas) 提出的。她解释说,“所有层都是同质的”模型是一个危险信号,因为地质很少是一致的。

对于石油工程师来说,油藏模型无法传达气体将在地层中流动的位置,而这些地层的特征通常不会在地震和其他测试中出现,这对石油工程师来说并不是什么新闻。新的情况是,在 CO 2封存项目中出现错误可能会带来一些麻烦

“当你开始操作时,如果气体发现了未被检测到的高渗透性通道,羽流的行为将与预期不同,”她在德克萨斯州米德兰最近举行的 CO 2会议上的演讲中说道。

如果羽流迁移到租用存储的孔隙中,这就会成为存储项目的一个问题。

在北达科他州,最糟糕的情况是“您可能违反了许可证,必须停止注入”,因为它已经侵入了未为该项目租赁的孔隙空间。

更有可能的是变得复杂。北达科他州的法规制定了一个预见到这一问题的流程,以及当储存地点超出界限时进行监控和允许修改的程序。改变需要举行公开听证会,“开发商可能会面临孔隙空间所有者和公众对该项目的新反对,”利弗斯-道格拉斯说。

北达科他州是少数几个制定了涵盖地下储存设施法律的州之一,在北达科他州之外,租赁区域外羽流的增长可能会给该项目带来不确定性。

根据 CO 2提高石油采收率 (EOR) 的长期经验,失控注入可能会导致与拥有地下权利的邻居发生冲突,例如附近天然气生产商的诉讼,这些生产商付费以消除生产中不断上升的迁移 CO 2水平。

困扰羽流增长预测的因素也可能导致关键项目变量的预测出现问题,例如预期注气率和总存储量。

jpt_22_eerc_co2_plume_map.png
图1——基于附近井测井数据(虚线)的注气羽流预测在添加地震数据(蓝色区域)后发生了显着变化。
资料来源:EERC。

它会去哪里?

EERC最近完成的一个 CO 2羽流建模项目展示了更多数据如何能够极大地改变注入大量天然气后的预期。

根据附近探井的井下测井进行的初步评估预测,注入的气体羽流将填充蓝色虚线界定的区域。

当对地震数据加测井数据进行建模时,结果是一个拉长的蓝色区域,该区域延伸到前一次运行的边界之外,如图1 中的实心蓝色区域所示。

如图 2所示,地震数据揭示了地下层更多的垂直变化,从而改变了情况。利弗斯-道格拉斯说,当添加这些数据后,该模型预测羽流将升至结构性高点。

当被问及哪一个是正确的时,她说这可能介于两者之间。她建议开发商在规划项目时将第二种模式视为最坏情况。

如果不注入气体,就无法确定哪一个是正确的,在这种情况下,这种情况不会发生,因为开发商将项目搬到了几英里外的地方。她说,新地点的地下高程变化较少,而这些变化在第一个地点造成了很大的不确定性。

羽流建模对于地球科学家和石油工程师来说是一个新的挑战,并且可供依赖的存储数据量有限。

虽然我们从 EOR 中学到了很多东西,但在油藏中循环足够的天然气以增加产量和注入尽可能多的天然气以进行永久储存(通常是在不熟悉的地层中)之间很可能存在显着差异。

打印
图2——根据附近井的测井曲线(左)预测的拟议封存地点的地层形状与地震成像中的起伏(右)相比相对平坦。
资料来源:EERC。

二氧化碳很棘手

上述所有内容都主张在规划项目时支付大量的井下数据和分析费用。但这些预测总是存在不确定性,因此明智的做法是获得足够大区域的孔隙空间权利,以留出误差范围,利弗斯-道格拉斯说。

“用 3D 地震来检测所有可能影响气体运移的挡板或障碍物确实很难,”她说。

当天然气储存在枯竭的油气田中时,生产数据可以提供有关储层结构的有价值的详细信息。然而,在北达科他州,封存项目正在向大量钻探的 巴肯矿区之外的盐水含水层注入水。

工业设施下方捕获CO 2 的位置可以节省大量资金并减少与管道建设相关的麻烦,但缺乏可以提供有关油藏性能的宝贵线索的油田生产数据。

即使是众所周知的、经过仔细研究的阵型也会令人惊讶。CO 2会议上的另一场演讲描述了挪威近海 Snasehvit 油田CO 2羽流的意外增长。尽管在一个大型海上油田附近的区域进行了周密的规划过程,使用了异常长的注入前诊断清单,但还是出现了令人惊讶的情况。

CO 2出乎意料地广泛扩散,威胁到即将生产的气田。此后,该地点的二氧化碳注入已被关闭。

根据这一经验,挪威科技大学兼职教授菲利普·林罗斯(Philip Ringrose)建议观众“在开始注射时期待惊喜。”

原文链接/jpt
Carbon capture and storage

Irregular Is What’s Regular for CO2 Storage Plumes

A critical challenge for those designing carbon dioxide storage sites is predicting where the injected gas will go. One of the only sure bets is to assume that any model of a gas plume that looks symmetrical is likely wrong.

jpt_22_co2_plume_model.JPG
Two models of a proposed CO2 injection reservoir that was ultimately passed over due to the uncertainty introduced by the formation's undulating features.
Source: Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC).

As a rule, when it comes to evaluating models of how carbon dioxide (CO2) will behave after it is injected into a formation, beware of a “geologic model that looks like a layer cake.”

That advice was offered by Amanda Livers-Douglas, assistant director for integrated subsurface projects at the Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC) at the University of North Dakota. She explained that models where “all the layers are homogenous” are a red flag because geology is rarely consistent.

It’s hardly news to petroleum engineers that reservoir models fail to convey where gasses will flow in the formations full of features that regularly do not show up in seismic and other tests. What is new is the sort of trouble that can be associated with getting that wrong in a CO2 storage project.

“When you start operations, if the gas finds an undetected high-permeability channel, the plume will act differently than predicted,” she said during a presentation at the recent CO2 Conference in Midland, Texas.

This becomes a problem for a storage project if the plume migrates into pores that were leased for storage.

In North Dakota, the worst-case scenario is “you may be in noncompliance of your permit and have to stop injection” because it has invaded pore space not leased for the project.

What is more likely gets complicated. North Dakota’s regulations set a process that anticipates this problem and the procedures for monitoring and permit modifications when storage sites grow outside the lines. Changes require public hearings “where the developer could face new opposition to the project from pore space owners and the public,” Livers-Douglas said.

Outside of North Dakota, which is one of the few states with a law covering subsurface units created for storage, plume growth outside the leased area can create a cloud of uncertainty over the project.

Based on long experience in CO2 enhanced oil recovery (EOR), runaway injections can lead to conflicts with neighbors with subsurface rights, such as lawsuits from nearby natural gas producers who are paying to remove rising levels of migrating CO2 from their production.

The factors that bedevil those predicting plume growth can also lead to problems in predictions of key project variables such as the expected gas-injection rate and the total storage volume.

jpt_22_eerc_co2_plume_map.png
Fig. 1—A gas injection plume prediction based on well log data (dotted line) from nearby wells changed significantly when seismic data was added (blue area).
Source: EERC.

Where Will It Go?

A recent CO2 plume-modeling project done at the EERC shows how more data can drastically change what is expected after large volumes of gas are injected.

The initial evaluation based on downhole logs from nearby exploration wells predicted the injected gas plume would fill the area bounded by the dotted blue line.

When seismic data plus well log data were modeled, the result was an elongated blue area which extended well outside the boundaries of the previous run, shown as the solid blue area in Fig. 1.

Seismic data, shown in Fig. 2, changed the picture by revealing far more vertical variation in the subsurface layers. When that data was added, the model predicted the plume would rise up to a structural high, said Livers-Douglas.

When asked which of those is correct, she said it was likely somewhere in between the two. She would advise the developer to treat the second model as a worst-case scenario when planning the project.

There is no way to be sure which is correct without injecting the gas, which isn’t going to happen in this case because the developer moved the project to a location a few miles away. The new location has fewer of the subsurface elevation variations that caused so much uncertainty at the first location, she said.

Plume modeling is an emerging challenge for geoscientists and petroleum engineers, and there is a limited amount of storage data to rely on.

While a lot has been learned from EOR, there may well be significant differences between cycling just enough gas through a reservoir to increase production and injecting as much gas as possible for permanent storage, often in unfamiliar sorts of formations.

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Fig. 2—The shape of the layers in a proposed storage site predicted by well logs from nearby wells (left) was relatively flat compared to the ups and downs in the seismic imaging (right).
Source: EERC.

CO2 Is Tricky

All of the above argues for paying for extensive downhole data and analysis when planning a project. But there will always be uncertainty in these predictions, so it is wise to acquire pore space rights over a large enough area to build in a margin for error, Livers-Douglas said.

“It’s really hard with 3D seismic to detect all the baffles or barriers that can influence gas migration,” she said.

When the gas is being stored in depleted oil and gas fields, the production data can offer valuable details about the reservoir structure. In North Dakota, though, the storage projects are injecting into saline aquifers outside the heavily drilled Bakken play.

The locations below industrial facilities where the CO2 is captured save a lot of money and trouble associated with pipeline building but lack the oilfield production data that can provide valuable clues about reservoir performance.

Even a well-known, closely examined formation can surprise. Another presentation at the CO2 Conference described the unexpected growth of the CO2 plume at the Snøhvit Field offshore Norway. The surprise occurred despite a thorough planning process that used an unusually long list of pre-injection diagnostics in an area near a large offshore field.

The unexpectedly wide spread of the CO2 threatened to contaminate a nearly producing gas field. Carbon dioxide injection at the site has since been shut down.

Based on the experience, Philip Ringrose, adjunct professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, advised the audience to “expect surprises when you start injection.”