Abstract
Residual oil zones (ROZs) are increasingly gaining interest as potential reservoirs for carbon dioxide (CO2) storage. Here, we present a national- and regional-scale methodology for estimating prospective CO2 storage resources in residual oil zones. This methodology uses a volumetric equation that accounts for CO2 storage as a free phase in pore space and as a dissolved phase in oil and does not assume any oil production associated with CO2 storage. Reservoir modeling and the CO2-SCREEN tool are used to demonstrate that CO2 storage in residual oil zones will predominantly take place in the free phase (approximately 92–97%) with some storage as dissolution in oil (approximately 3–8 %). Based on this preliminary demonstration, the CO2 storage efficiency for ROZs using this national- and regional-scale method ranges from 0.61 to 7.1 %. This range indicates ROZs have a similar efficiency potential for storing CO2 as deep saline formations (0.51–5.4 %).
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Sanguinito, S., Singh, H., Myshakin, E. M., Goodman, A. L., Dilmore, R. M., Grant, T. C., … Pawar, R. (2020). Methodology for estimating the prospective CO2 storage resource of residual oil zones at the national and regional scale. International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control, 96. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijggc.2020.103006
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