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Free keywords:
CO2 storage;
Ketzin pilot site;
seismic
Abstract:
The Ketzin pilot site for geological CO2-storage has been operative between June 2008 and August 2013. In this period, 67 kt of CO2 have been injected (Martens et al., this conference). Repeated 3D seismic monitoring surveys
were performed before and during CO2 injection. A third repeat survey, providing data from the post-injection
phase, is currently being prepared for the autumn of 2015. The large scale 3D surface seismic measurements have
been complemented by other geophysical and geochemical monitoring methods, among which are high-resolution
seismic surface-downhole observations. These observations have been concentrating on the reservoir area in the
vicinity of the injection well and provide high-resolution images as well as data for petrophysical quantification of the CO2 distribution in the reservoir.
The Ketzin pilot site is a saline aquifer site in an onshore environment which poses specific challenges for a reliable monitoring of the injection CO2. Although much effort was done to ensure as much as possible identical acquisition conditions, a high degree of repeatability noise was observed, mainly due to varying weather conditions, and also variations in the acquisition geometries due to logistical reasons. Nevertheless,
time-lapse processing succeeded in generating 3D time-lapse data sets which could be interpreted in terms of CO2 storage related amplitude variations in the depth range of the storage reservoir. The time-lapse seismic data, pulsed-neutron-gamma logging results (saturation), and petrophysical core measurements were interpreted
together in order to estimate the amount of injected carbon dioxide imaged by the seismic repeat data. For the first repeat survey, the mass estimation was summed up to 20.5 ktons, which is approximately 7% less than what had
been injected then. For the second repeat survey, the mass estimation was summed up to approximately 10-15%
less than what had been injected. The deviations may be explained by several factors of uncertainty, and by partial dissolution of the injected CO2, thus reducing the amount of free gas, which can be detected by seismic time-lapse observations. These quantitative assessment studies have shown that conformity between injected and estimated CO2 quantities can only be achieved with some degree of uncertainty which needs to be quantified for a realistic assessment of conformity studies.