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Seismic detection of CO2 leakage along monitoring wellbores
Authors:M Bohnhoff  MD Zoback  L Chiaramonte  JL Gerst  N Gupta
Institution:1. Department of Geophysics, Stanford University, CA, United States;2. Helmholtz-Centre Potsdam-GFZ, Germany;3. Battelle Memorial Institute, Columbus, OH, United States;1. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Earth Sciences Division, CA, USA;2. GeoAzur, University of Nice Sophia-Antipolis, Côte d’Azur Observatory, France;1. Department of Geology, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Iran;2. Faculty of Earth Sciences, Kharazmi University, Tehran, Iran;1. Battelle, 505 King Ave, Columbus, OH 43201, USA;2. Western Michigan University, 1093 W Michigan Ave, Kalamazoo, MI,49008, USA;3. Core Energy, LLC, 1011 Noteware Drive, Traverse City, MI, 49686, USA;4. PKM Energy Consulting LLC, 2406 Cross Creek Road, Macungie, PA, 18062, USA;5. Wade LLC, 1784 Lanier Pl NW, Washington DC, 20009, USA
Abstract:A pilot carbon dioxide (CO2) sequestration experiment was carried out in the Michigan Basin in which ~10,000 tonnes of supercritical CO2 was injected into the Bass Island Dolomite (BILD) at 1050 m depth. A passive seismic monitoring (PSM) network was operated before, during and after the ~17-day injection period. The seismic monitoring network consisted of two arrays of eight, three-component sensors, deployed in two monitoring wells at only a few hundred meters from the injection point. 225 microseismic events were detected by the arrays. Of these, only one event was clearly an injection-induced microearthquake. It occurred during injection, approximately 100 m above the BILD formation. No events, down to the magnitude ?3 detection limit, occurred within the BILD formation during the injection. The observed seismic waveforms associated with the other 224 events were quite unusual in that they appear to contain dominantly compressional (P) but no (or extremely weak) shear (S) waves, indicating that they are not associated with shear slip on faults. The microseismic events were unusual in two other ways. First, almost all of the events occurred prior to the start of injection into the BILD formation. Second, hypocenters of the 94 locatable events cluster around the wells where the sensor arrays were deployed, not the injection well. While the temporal evolution of these events shows no correlation with the BILD injection, they do correlate with CO2 injection for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) into the 1670 m deep Coral Reef formation that had been going on for ~2.5 years prior to the pilot injection experiment into the BILD formation. We conclude that the unusual microseismic events reflect degassing processes associated with leakage up and around the monitoring wells from the EOR-related CO2 injection into the Coral Reef formation, ~700 m below the depth of the monitoring arrays. This conclusion is also supported by the observation that as soon as injection into the Coral Reef formation resumed at the conclusion of the BILD demonstration experiment, seismic events (essentially identical to the events associated with the Coral Reef injection prior to the BILD experiment) again started to occur close to a monitoring arrays. Taken together, these observations point to vertical migration around the casings of the monitoring wellbores. Detection of these unusual microseismic events was somewhat fortuitous in that the arrays were deployed at the depth where the CO2 undergoes a strong volume increase during transition from a supercritical state to a gas. Given the large number of pre-existing wellbores that exist in depleted oil and gas reservoirs that might be considered for CO2 sequestration projects, passive seismic monitoring systems could be deployed at appropriate depths to systematically detect and monitor leakage along them.
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