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How to Store CO2 Underground: Insights from early-mover CCS Projects, 1st ed. 2020 SpringerBriefs in Earth Sciences Series

Langue : Anglais

Auteur :

Couverture de l’ouvrage How to Store CO2 Underground: Insights from early-mover CCS Projects
This book introduces the scientific basis and engineering practice for CO2 storage, covering topics such as storage capacity, trapping mechanisms, CO2 phase behaviour and flow dynamics, engineering and geomechanics of geological storage, injection well design, and geophysical and geochemical monitoring. It also provides numerous examples from the early mover CCS projects, notably Sleipner and Snøhvit offshore Norway, as well as other pioneering CO2 storage projects.
1. Why we need engineered geological storage of CO2 
1.1 Motivation 
1.2 Brief History of Fossil Fuels
1.3 Brief History of Greenhouse Gas 
1.4 Why do we need CCS
1.5 Introduction to CCS technology

2. Geological Storage of CO2: Processes, Capacity and Constraints 
2.1 Introduction 
2.2 Basic concepts for geological storage of CO2
2.3 Containment and trapping mechanisms

3. CO2 Storage Project Design 
3.1 Injection well design and management
3.2 Handling rock mechanical effects
3.3 CO2 thermodynamics and transport 
3.4 CO2 storage flow dynamics 
3.5 Long-term effects 

4. Monitoring Project Performance and site Integrity 
4.1 Designing the monitoring programme
4.2 Down-hole monitoring 
4.3 Remote geophysical monitoring 
4.4 Environmental monitoring
4.5 Site integrity and risk management 

5. Emerging themes and technologies

References
Philip Ringrose is a specialist in Reservoir Geoscience at Equinor and Adjunct Professor of CO2 Storage at NTNU. Over the last decade, he has worked on various developments in CCS and on several large-scale CO2 storage projects. He has 30 years of industry and research experience, including positions as Lead Geologist, Åsgard Development, Statoil E&P (Norway), and Advisor for Geological Reservoir Modelling and Uncertainty Analysis (Statoil). Between 1990 and 1997, he was a Lecturer and Research Fellow at the Heriot-Watt Institute of Petroleum Engineering, Edinburgh, UK. He has published widely on reservoir geoscience and flow in rock media and has recently published a textbook on Reservoir Model Design (Springer). He is Chief Editor for the journal Petroleum Geoscience. In 2012, he was elected as the 2014–2015 President of the European Association of Geoscientists and Engineers (EAGE) and served for 3 years on the board of the EAGE. He has served on numerous conference committees, including the SPE Forum Series, the EAGE Sustainable Earth Sciences Conferences, and the EAGE CO2 Geological Storage Workshop. He has participated in several of the Gordon Research Conferences and has also served as external reviewer for the IEAGHG Peer Review of the USDoE Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnerships (RCSP) programme. He is currently a member of the Scientific Advisory Council of the German Research Centre for Geosciences, GFZ.
 
Dr Ringrose was honoured with the following awards: Mobil (North Sea) Ltd Prize for outstanding performance in geophysics, Edinburgh University, 1981; Dr James MacKenzie Prize for excellence in postgraduate research, Strathclyde University, 1987; and an Honorary Professorship (2018–2021) at the University of Edinburgh, School of Geosciences.


Date de parution :

Ouvrage de 129 p.

15.5x23.5 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 15 jours).

58,01 €

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