Carbon dioxide stored in geological reservoirs to reduce anthropogenic emissions must be monitored to ensure that no leakage is occurring. One leakage risk is that injection-induced pressure increases may generate fractures in the caprock, providing a pathway for buoyant carbon dioxide to penetrate the reservoir seal. Geophones can be deployed to detect fracturing events. The rates and magnitudes of seismicity, and their hypocentres, can be used to characterise geomechanical deformation induced by injection, and thereby assess the risks of leakage through fractures. In this paper synthetically modelled data are used to show how surveys should be designed to maximise the potential for this technique within the specific remits of carbon dioxide capture and geological storage (CCS), before discussing several case examples where passive seismic monitoring has been used to monitor subsurface injection of carbon dioxide. Recommendations and suggestions are given for the deployment of passive seismic monitoring as CCS moves from pilot to full-scale demonstration and commercial projects.
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May 2012
Research Article|
May 01 2012
Monitoring carbon dioxide storage using passive seismic techniques Available to Purchase
James P. Verdon;
James P. Verdon
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol,
Bristol, UK
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J.-Michael Kendall;
J.-Michael Kendall
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol,
Bristol, UK
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Don J. White
Don J. White
Geological Survey of Canada,
Ottawa, Canada
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
October 31 2010
Accepted:
August 25 2011
Online ISSN: 1751-4231
Print ISSN: 1751-4223
ICE Publishing: All rights reserved
2012
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Energy (2012) 165 (2): 85–96.
Article history
Received:
October 31 2010
Accepted:
August 25 2011
Citation
Verdon JP, Kendall J, White DJ (2012), "Monitoring carbon dioxide storage using passive seismic techniques". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Energy, Vol. 165 No. 2 pp. 85–96, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/ener.10.00018
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