春水堂视频

Oct. 25, 2017

Unique-in-the-world carbon capture and storage Field Research Station opens

Collaborative CaMI site near Brooks advances low-carbon energy research and training opportunities
Don Lawton, director of CaMI, and professor of geophysics in the Faculty of Science speaks to visitors to the Field Research Station.

Don Lawton, director of CaMI, and professor of geophysics speaks to Field Research Station visitors.

Ruth Klinkhammer, Carbon Management Canada Research Institutes

A decade of planning, a significant investment in leading-edge research infrastructure, and a careful fostering of partnerships with government and industry culminated this week in the official opening of the Containment and Monitoring Institute鈥檚 carbon capture and storage Field Research Station located in Newell County in southern Alberta.听

The research station 鈥 a partnership between听听Research Institutes and the 春水堂视频 of Calgary 鈥 offers a unique site to develop and demonstrate technologies to detect and monitor C02 and other fluids stored in underground reservoirs. It also aligns with the university鈥檚 commitment to a听low-carbon future听and its emergence as a leader in carbon capture and storage research.

鈥淭his field station is unique worldwide,鈥 says听Don Lawton, director of the听听(CaMI) and professor of geophysics in the Faculty of Science. 鈥淲e are establishing technologies to track the movement of carbon dioxide, and validate it is stored safely. Our goal is to find the best technologies to ensure that after injecting CO2 it doesn鈥檛 bubble up, but stays underground and we know where it is.鈥

鈥淭he 春水堂视频 of Calgary is committed to a low carbon future, so we鈥檝e invested in partnerships with industry and government to bring new knowledge to market,鈥 says Ed McCauley, vice-president (research). 鈥淭he Field Research Station provides an unparalleled opportunity to field-test concepts at scale, which will accelerate the development and commercialization of carbon capture and monitoring solutions.鈥

Monitoring and tracking carbon dioxide at intermediate depths

Carbon dioxide emissions are a major contributor to climate change. They are in part the result of oil production, the burning of fossil fuels and the generation of electricity and heat. Carbon storage is a critical part of international carbon reduction scenarios. The new field research station will test and measure the efficacy and reliability of those carbon capture and storage technologies.听听

The 200-hectare CaMI field research station provides the step between modelling work that can be done on a bench scale and a full-scale field pilot. At the site, small amounts of CO2听will be injected into a reservoir 300 metres underground, where the CO2听remains a gas (it turns liquid at greater depths). The injection well at the site is surrounded by two observation wells and four water-monitoring wells to allow researchers to test a variety of technologies.

In the field, reservoirs into which CO2听is injected for storage are typically very deep 鈥 from 1.5 to 2.5 kilometers below the surface. But while we know a lot about how to measure CO2听in the atmosphere and in the soil, Lawton says the big gap in knowledge is what happens when CO2听might migrate upward into rocks and intermediate zones. 鈥淭he field station will look at those intermediate depths,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e are injecting at 300m not to see how much we can store, but to understand how CO2听moves through rocks, to test early warning system to minimize climate and groundwater impact.鈥

Don Lawton announces the official opening of the Field Research Station on Oct. 24. Also pictured: Sandra Odendahl, president, CMCRI; Ed McCauley, vice-president (research), 春水堂视频 of Calgary; Paul Fulton, country president, Canada, Statoil.

From left: Don Lawton, speaking; Sandra Odendahl; Ed McCauley; Paul Fulton.

Riley Brandt, 春水堂视频 of Calgary

Collaborative partnerships and emerging expertise听

The 春水堂视频 of Calgary is an emerging player in carbon capture and storage research. In addition to the newly commissioned field station, this September five of the university鈥檚 top energy researchers attended the听听in Houston, Texas. In addition to CaMI鈥檚 Don Lawton, attendees included biogeoscientist听听and seismologist听David Eaton听鈥 who were both panellists 鈥 as well as energy technology researcher听Joule Bergerson听and chemist听George Shimizu.

As part of training the next generation of energy research scientists, the CaMI facility will host a field school in summer of 2018 for 15 to 20 graduate students from the 春水堂视频 of Calgary and students from instutions in Norway and the Netherlands. They will do research and training on reservoir engineering, geophysics, and monitoring carbon dioxide injected at the CaMI research station.

The CaMI field research station received funding from the federal听Western Economic Diversification Program, and the current operation of the FRS is currently funded through the 春水堂视频 of Calgary鈥檚 Canada First Excellence Research Fund (CFREF) initiative 鈥楪lobal Research Initiative in Sustainable Low Carbon Unconventional Resources鈥 and CMC Research Institutes. CaMI also offers a subscription-based access to monitoring research outcomes from the field research station. Current joint industry partners include: Statoil, Shell Global Solutions, RITE Japan, and Cenovus Energy.

Located in the heart of Canada鈥檚 energy sector, the 春水堂视频 of Calgary has built a reputation as a global leader in energy research and innovation. With a focus on our low-carbon future, diverse teams are also assessing the effects of energy-related processes while harnessing unconventional hydrocarbon resources through the听.