Abstract

Time-lapse (4D) seismic monitoring of injected CO2 in geological formations is being increasingly employed as the principal method for ensuring containment of the CO2 and testing conformance of predicted plume behaviour. However, to bring further confidence in this method, the CO2 volume detection limit in the seismic monitoring and key factors controlling it need to be quantitatively understood. The CO2CRC Otway Project attempts to improve this understanding by exploring the capability of seismic reflection method to detect and monitor a 15,000t injection of supercritical CO2/CH4 mixture in a saline aquifer at a depth of 1500m. To increase the signal to noise ratio and to reduce the disruption to land users, seismic acquisition is performed using a buried geophone array. Seismic acquisition occurred at injection intervals of 5000, 10,000 and 15,000t over a 5-month period. The seismic images clearly show the distribution and evolution of the stored CO2/CH4 plume. The analysis confirms that signal from pure CO2 would be of similar magnitude to the signal from CO2/CH4 mixture. The results demonstrate the potential of time-lapse reflection seismic to provide key information to both operators and regulators for confirming the security and behaviour of stored CO2 at very small volumes.

Full Text
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