Crediting carbon dioxide storage associated with enhanced oil recovery

被引:3
|
作者
Van Voorhees, Robert F. [1 ]
机构
[1] Bryan Cave LLP, 1155 F St,NW,Ste 700, Washington, DC 20004 USA
关键词
carbon dioxide storge; carbon capture and storage; carbon capture utilization and storage; enhanced oil recovery; geologic sequestration; greenhouse gas reporting;
D O I
10.1016/j.egypro.2017.03.1898
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
What must be done to get credit for the quantities of carbon dioxide unavoidably stored in association with carbon dioxide enhanced oil recovery (CO2-EOR)? This presentation will explore that question with particular emphasis on several recent developments occurring in December 2015 that will directly affect the answers to that question in the context of the United States Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA's) regulatory scheme for controlling greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. In 2015 EPA finalized a foundational regulatory framework for controlling GHG emissions from both new and existing fossil-fuelled electric utility generating units. In doing so, EPA conditioned the use of CCS on quantifying stored carbon dioxide through reporting under subpart RR of the part 98 GHG reporting requirements, the reporting approach developed primarily for geological sequestration in saline formations. And subpart RR reporting would be required regardless of whether carbon dioxide storage is achieved through geologic sequestration or in association with carbon dioxide enhanced oil recovery (CO2-EOR). Numerous concerns were raised in comments on the proposed rules and in response to the final rules about the ability for EOR operations to comply with the reporting requirements of subpart RR, and from 2010 until 2015 no one reported under subpart RR because all of the projects injecting carbon dioxide into saline formations had qualified for research exemptions, and no EOR operations had voluntarily opted to report under subpart RR rather than under subparts W and UU. As 2015 came to a close, efforts were launched to get EPA to show that the hurdles to quantifying and reporting for carbon dioxide stored in association with CO2 EOR can be surmounted or to remove those hurdles. On December 22, 2015 EPA approved the first ever use of subpart RR reporting for a CO2-EOR operation by approving a monitoring, reporting and verification (MRV) plan submitted by Occidental Petroleum for the Denver Unit in the Permian Basin of West Texas. In so doing, EPA provided some clarity about how a number of concerns and uncertainties surrounding the use of subpart RR reporting for storage associated with CO2-EOR, and the decision indicates significant flexibility to adapt parts of subpart RR requirements to a substantially different context than saline formation geologic storage. Yet other questions that have been raised remain unanswered in any direct way. And these uncertainties may bar the way to effective implementation of EPA's requirements for existing electric utility generating units. EPA is being called upon to show how the reporting can be achieved without disrupting the EOR operations through clarifications, guidance, policy revisions, or decisions or, alternatively, to remove the hurdles through regulatory actions. This presentation will explain the significant developments in reporting and in regulatory petitions that occurred at the end of 2015 and assess how this affects the viability of CCUS that relies on storage associated with CO2-EOR. It will also survey the potential effects of other developments in the implementation of other CO2 storage quantification and reporting regimes at the subnational, national and international levels in comparison with the requirements being implemented by EPA at the federal level. (c) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier
引用
收藏
页码:7659 / 7666
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Carbon Dioxide Enhanced Oil Recovery Injection Operations Technologies
    Parker, Michael E.
    Meyer, James P.
    Meadows, Stephanie R.
    GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL TECHNOLOGIES 9, 2009, 1 (01): : 3141 - 3148
  • [22] Significance of Enhanced Oil Recovery in Carbon Dioxide Emission Reduction
    Novak Mavar, Karolina
    Gaurina-Medimurec, Nediljka
    Hrncevic, Lidia
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 13 (04) : 1 - 27
  • [23] The role of enhanced oil recovery for carbon capture, use, and storage
    Kuuskraa, Vello
    GREENHOUSE GASES-SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2013, 3 (01): : 3 - 4
  • [24] Investment in carbon dioxide capture and storage combined with enhanced water recovery
    Li, Jia-Quan
    Yu, Bi-Ying
    Tang, Bao-Jun
    Hou, Yunbing
    Mi, Zhifu
    Shu, Yaqing
    Wei, Yi-Ming
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GREENHOUSE GAS CONTROL, 2020, 94 (94)
  • [25] Reactivity of dolomite in water-saturated supercritical carbon dioxide: Significance for carbon capture and storage and for enhanced oil and gas recovery
    Wang, Xiuyu
    Alvarado, Vladimir
    Swoboda-Colberg, Norbert
    Kaszuba, John P.
    ENERGY CONVERSION AND MANAGEMENT, 2013, 65 : 564 - 573
  • [26] Pipeline backbone for carbon dioxide for enhanced oil recovery in western Canada
    Luhning, RW
    Glanzer, JH
    Noble, R
    Wang, HS
    JOURNAL OF CANADIAN PETROLEUM TECHNOLOGY, 2005, 44 (08): : 55 - 58
  • [27] Visualization of Carbon Dioxide Enhanced Oil Recovery by Diffusion in Fractured Chalk
    Eide, Oyvind
    Ferno, Martin A.
    Alcorn, Zachary
    Graue, Arne
    SPE JOURNAL, 2016, 21 (01): : 112 - 120
  • [28] A Unique Opportunity for Liquid Carbon Dioxide as an Enhanced Oil Recovery Method
    Irawan, F.
    Irawan, S.
    Awang, M.
    ENERGY SOURCES PART A-RECOVERY UTILIZATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS, 2012, 34 (5-8) : 654 - 661
  • [29] A critical review of carbon dioxide enhanced oil recovery in carbonate reservoirs
    Tan, Yongsheng
    Li, Qi
    Xu, Liang
    Ghaffar, Abdul
    Zhou, Xiang
    Li, Pengchun
    FUEL, 2022, 328
  • [30] CARBON-DIOXIDE FLOODING AS AN ENHANCED OIL-RECOVERY PROCESS
    MUNGAN, N
    JOURNAL OF CANADIAN PETROLEUM TECHNOLOGY, 1992, 31 (09): : 13 - 15