Geochemical Modeling of CO 2Injection into a Methane Gas Reservoir at the K12-B Field, North Sea
Pascal Audigane, Julie Lions, Irina Gaus, Christian Robelin, Pierre Durst, Bert Van der Meer, Kees Geel, Curtis M. Oldenburg, Tianfu XuAbstract
In the framework of selecting potential targets for CO 2geological storage, depleted gas reservoirs are well positioned because they offer directly reusable platform facilities, proven cap rock, and seal integrity; because these reservoirs contained a highly mobile gas phase for thousands to millions of years; and a very detailed reservoir characterization developed for gas production purposes. Furthermore, coupled with enhanced gas recovery, CO 2sequestration in gas reservoirs is also a means to reduce costs for CO 2injection by producing the remaining gas. This chapter presents a numerical simulation study of CO 2injection into the nearly depleted gas reservoir at the K12-B field, North Sea, selected as a demonstration site for the Offshore Reinjection of CO 2project. Simulations have been conducted using two different codes: TOUGHREACT, for characterizing the geochemical fluid-rock interactions that may occur during the injection period, and TOUGH2/EOS7C, for simulating the CO 2sequestration coupled with enhanced methane production. Simulation results show that considering the injection of about 3 million tons of CO 2for 10 yr, (1) a very low geochemical impact is expected to occur, which is favorable in terms of cap rock and reservoir integrity, and (2) the enhanced gas recovery efficiency remains limited when considering the full-scale CO 2injection rate.