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Free keywords:
3D time-lapse seismic,
Ketzin pilot site,
CO2 storage
Abstract:
3D time-lapse seismic surveys (4D seismic) have proven to be a suitable technique for monitoring of injected
CO2, because when CO2 replaces brine as a free gas it considerably affects elastic properties of porous media.
Forward modeling of a 4D seismic response to the CO2
-fluid substitution in a storage reservoir is an inevitable step in such studies. At the Ketzin pilot site (CO2 storage) 67 kilotons of CO2 were injected into a saline aquifer between 2008 and 2013. In order to track migration of CO2 at Ketzin, 3D time-lapse seismic data were acquired by means of a baseline pre-injection survey in 2005 and 3 monitor surveys: in 2009, 2012 and in 2015 (the 1st post-injection survey). Results of the 4D seismic forward modeling with the reflectivity method suggest that effects of the injected CO2 on the 4D seismic data at Ketzin are significant regarding both seismic amplitudes and time delays. These results prove the corresponding observations in the real 4D seismic data at the Ketzin pilot site. But reservoir heterogeneity and seismic resolution, as well as random and coherent seismic noise are negative factors
to be considered in this interpretation. Results of the 4D seismic forward modeling with the reflectivity method
support the conclusion that even small amounts of injected CO2 can be monitored in such post-injected saline
aquifer as the CO2 storage reservoir at the Ketzin pilot site both qualitatively and quantitatively with considerable uncertainties (Lüth et al., 2015).