Planting Carbon Deep In The Earth -- Rather Than
The Greenhouse
11/27/2007
Storing carbon dioxide deep below the earth’s surface could be a safe,
long-term solution to one of the planet’s major contributors to climate
change.
University of Leeds research shows that porous sandstone, drained of oil by
the energy giants, could provide a safe reservoir for carbon dioxide. The
study found that sandstone reacts with injected fluids more quickly than had
been predicted - such reactions are essential if the captured CO2 is not to
leak back to the surface.
The study looked at data from the Miller oilfield in the North Sea, where BP
had been pumping seawater into the oil reservoir to enhance the flow of oil.
As oil was extracted, the water that was pumped out with it was analysed and
this showed that minerals had grown and dissolved as the water travelled
through the field.
Significantly, PhD student Stephanie Houston found that water pumped out
with the oil was especially rich in silica. This showed that silicates,
usually thought of as very slow to react, had dissolved in the
newly-injected seawater over less than a year. This is the type of reaction
that would be needed to make carbon dioxide stable in the pore waters,
rather like the dissolved carbonate found in still mineral water.
The study gives a clear indication that carbon dioxide sequestered deep
underground could also react quickly with ordinary rocks to become
assimilated into the deep formation water.
The work was supervised by Bruce Yardley, Professor in the School of Earth
and Environment at the University, who explained: “If CO2 is injected
underground we hope that it will react with the water and minerals there in
order to be stabilized. That way it spreads into its local environment
rather than remaining as a giant gas bubble which might ultimately seep to
the surface.
“It had been thought that reaction might take place over hundreds or
thousands of years, but there’s a clear implication in this study that if we
inject carbon dioxide into rocks, these reactions will happen quite quickly
making it far less likely to escape.”
Although extracting CO2 from power stations and storing it underground has
been suggested as a long-term measure for tackling climate change, it has
not yet been put to work for this purpose on a large scale. “There is one
storage project in place at Sleipner, in the Norwegian sector of the North
Sea, and some oil companies have actually used CO2 sequestration as a means
of pushing out more oil from existing oilfields,” said Prof Yardley.
In the UK the Prime Minister has recently announced a major expansion of
energy from renewable sources and the launch of a competition to build one
of the world's first carbon capture and storage plants. The Leeds study
suggests the technique has long-term potential for safely storing this major
by-product of our power stations, rather than allowing it to escape and
further contribute to global warming.
SOURCE: University of Leeds |