DOE - Fossil Energy Techline - Issued on: November 16, 2011 Midwest Has Potential to Store Hundreds of Years of CO2 EmissionsRegional Partnership's Phase II Field Tests Validate Earlier Research ResultsWashington, D.C. Geologic capacity exists to permanently store hundreds of years of regional carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in nine states stretching from Indiana to New Jersey, according to injection field tests conducted by the Midwest Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnership (MRCSP).
MRCSP is one of seven Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnerships (RCSPs) established by the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Fossil Energy (FE) to determine the best geologic and terrestrial storage approaches and apply technologies to safely and permanently store CO2 for each partnership’s specific region. Establishing the safe, permanent and environmentally sound storage of CO2 is a key element in moving toward the commercial deployment of carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) technology, which many experts view as a crucial option in helping meet the climate change challenge. MRCSP’s Phase II small-scale geologic field tests used less than 60,000 metric tons of CO2 injection into selected deep saline formations to validate data from earlier Phase I, or characterization, research. Deep saline formation injection is a storage type that represents the most significant geologic storage potential for the United States. These latest results turn earlier information into practical, real-world knowledge for the most promising carbon storage technologies. Phase I projects characterized large point sources of CO2 and potential geological and terrestrial storage options for the region, which comprises Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. In all, seven small-scale field validation tests were conducted in Phase II:
Phase II terrestrial field tests showed that the MRCSP region can potentially store about 15 percent of the region’s annual CO2 emissions from large point sources, such as power plants. In particular, Phase II confirmed that no-till agriculture is a valuable carbon storage strategy with the added benefit of improved soil quality and agronomic productivity. MRCSP Phase II field tests also determined that oil-and-gas fields have a high potential for enhanced oil and gas production associated with CO2 storage. In addition, using CO2 for enhanced coalbed methane recovery also shows potential for storing CO2. The MRCSP estimates that by utilizing CO2 for EOR, approximately 1.2 billion barrels of oil could be recovered from existing oil fields in their region helping to offset the cost of deploying carbon capture and storage technologies. Managed by FE’s National Energy Technology Laboratory, the seven RCSPs, which includes the MRCSP, focus on CCS opportunities within their specific regions, while collectively building an effective and robust nationwide initiative. Through this process, each RCSP has developed a regional carbon management plan to identify the most suitable storage strategies and technologies, aid in regulatory development, and propose appropriate infrastructure for CCS commercialization within their respective regions. The MRCSP project, led by Battelle, included a public-private collaboration with nearly 40 members from government, industry, state geological surveys, and universities across the nine member states. - End of Techline
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