Geologic Carbon Storage in the Lower Ordovician Arbuckle Group Saline Aquifer in Kansas

Presented on Tuesday, May 6, 2014
W. Lynn Watney, Ph.D.1, Tiraz Birdie2, Yevhen (Eugene) Holubnyak1, Jason Rush, Mr.1, Fatemeh (Mina) FazelAlavi1, John Doveton, Ph.D.1, Thomas Hansen, Mr.3, Connie Walker4, Ken Cooper, PE4, Dana Wreath5 and Jennifer Raney, Ms.1, (1)Kansas Geological Survey, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, (2)TBirdie Consulting, Inc., Lawrence, KS, (3)Bittersweet Energy, Inc., Wichita, KS, (4)Petrotek Engineering Corporation, Littleton, CO, (5)Berexco, LLC, Wichita, KS

A small scale field test at Wellington oil field operated by Berexco LLC in Sumner County, Kansas will inject up to 40,000 tonnes (770,000 MCF) of CO2 over approximately nine months into the lower 46 m thick porous and permeable interval of the Gasconade Dolomite in the 300 m thick Lower Ordovician Arbuckle Group saline aquifer. The objective is to validate the predicted CO2 plume based on a 3D geocellular geomodel obtained from a 3D multi-component seismic volume and two new wells (one cored and both tested) drilled to basement. The plume behavior obtained from a compositional simulation will be tested and validated through visualization, sampling, and indirect detection using an array of monitoring technologies including in situ fluid sampling via U-tube, downhole continuous active seismic monitoring (CASSM), and vertical seismic profiling using acoustic recording from a continuous fiber optic cable installation. Also, CGPS and InSAR for potential surface deformation and a seismometer array will be installed. The CO2 injection, funded by DOE-NETL and cost sharing partners, is pending approval of a Class VI geosequestration permit.

Besides mapping the CO2 plume dispersal, the test will estimate the tonnage of CO2 sequestered and refine estimates of the regional carbon storage in the Arbuckle in southern Kansas. The current estimates range between 9-75 billion tonnes in a 9650 km2 area that has been extensively characterized by geological and geophysical methods.

Wells in the overlying Mississippian oil reservoir at 460 m above the injection zone and a nest of wells in the USDW will be monitored to detect any leakage. Encompassing static and dynamic models that incorporate Arbuckle injection, caprocks, and freshwater aquifers will evaluate flow, storage, seals, and risk.  Best practice methodologies for modeling, monitoring, verifying, and accounting of the CO2 should provide a framework for carbon management in the midcontinent.



W. Lynn Watney, Ph.D.
Kansas Geological Survey, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
W. Lynn Watney specializes in carbonate reservoir geology and Paleozoic stratigraphy. He received his B.S. and M.S. in Geology (geochemistry) from Iowa State University, and a Ph.D. in Geology from the University of Kansas. While at the KGS he served as a Research Associate from 1976-1981, Subsurface Section Chief from 1981-1990, Executive Director KU Energy Research Center from 1991-2007, and most recently as Senior Scientific Fellow (2007-present) in the Energy Research Section.
Tiraz Birdie
TBirdie Consulting, Inc., Lawrence, KS
Tiraz Birdie, M.S. Geology (groundwater), Kansas State University,
Yevhen (Eugene) Holubnyak
Kansas Geological Survey, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
Yevhen (Eugene) Holubnyak, Consultant, Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering, Kansas University.
Jason Rush, Mr.
Kansas Geological Survey, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
Jason Rush, M.S. Engineering, University of North Dakota.
Fatemeh (Mina) FazelAlavi
Kansas Geological Survey, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
Fatemeh (Mina) FazelAlavi, M.S. Geology, University of Texas.
John Doveton, Ph.D.
Kansas Geological Survey, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
John Doveton, B.S. Petroleum Engineering, University of Kansas.
Thomas Hansen, Mr.
Bittersweet Energy, Inc., Wichita, KS
Thomas Hansen has an M.S. in Geology, from Kansas State University.
Connie Walker
Petrotek Engineering Corporation, Littleton, CO
TBA
Ken Cooper, PE
Petrotek Engineering Corporation, Littleton, CO
TBA
Dana Wreath
Berexco, LLC, Wichita, KS
B.S., Petroleum Engineering, University of Kansas, M.S. Petroleum Engineering, University of Texas
Jennifer Raney, Ms.
Kansas Geological Survey, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
Jennifer Raney, Ph.D., Oxford University, well log petrophysics.
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