http://cordis.europa.eu/news/rcn/123219_en.html

Scientists lift the veil on sub-seabed carbon storage impact on local
ecosystems

Klaus Wallmann, coordinator of the ECO2, discusses the project's findings
on the impact of sub-seabed CO2 storage on marine ecosystems.

European seabeds are often scarred or fractured, yet oil industries in the
North and Barents seas are storing CO2 below these seabeds to reduce their
emissions. Is such sub-seabed CO2 storage a viable solution? A team of EU
scientists recently shed light on this matter.

With the objective of limiting global warming to +2°C by 2050 looking
increasingly out of reach and with a new UN climate conference on the
horizon, the EU and its international partners are under increased
pressure. All suitable solutions to reduce CO2 emissions have to be
contemplated, and carbon capture and storage (CCS) — a set of technologies
preventing CO2 from reaching the atmosphere by storing it in suitable
underground geological formations — is one of them.

In its recent Communication for an Energy Union, the European Commission
acknowledges the need for enhanced support for CCS. The technology has so
far failed to develop as initially expected, largely due to high investment
costs and limited incentives as a result of low carbon prices. But there is
another aspect of CCS that still leaves potential investors and
decision-makers in the dark: the question of leakage, especially in
sensitive storage locations such as seabeds.

For the past four years, a team of EU scientists have been monitoring
existing CCS installations in the North and Barents Sea to determine the
likelihood of a leakage scenario and its impact on local ecosystems. ECO2
(Sub-seabed CO2 Storage: Impact on Marine Ecosystems) scientists identified
possible pathways for CO2 leakage, monitored seepage sites, traced the
spread of CO2 in bottom waters and studied the responses of benthic animals
and plants to CO2. In early May, the project compiled these observations
into a guide for the selection and monitoring of storage sites and
presented it to the European Union.

Klaus Wallmann, coordinator of ECO2, discusses the project’s results and
the team’s plans for further research in the field.

What pushed you to do research in this area?

In Europe, most of the CO2 captured at power plants will be stored below
the seabed. It is thus important to understand whether CO2 will remain in
sub-seabed storage formations or will leak out to damage the ecosystem at
seabed level.

What would you say is the most innovative aspect of the project in this
regard?

The major new element of the ECO2 approach is the ‘Propensity to Leak
Factor’ which has been developed by combining a compact description of the
storage complex and heuristic techniques accommodating for the large number
of parameter uncertainties. Since it is not possible to simulate all
relevant geological features, processes and events with the modelling
software currently available, we found a way to realistically estimate how
likely a leakage is at a specific CCS installation.

At which locations did you conduct your research and why?

We investigated real storage sites in the North Sea and Barents Sea off
Norway where millions of tons of CO2 have been separated from natural gas
and stored in sub-seabed geological formations for many years.

How did you proceed to detect leakage from these sites?

A wide range of sea-going instrumentation was applied in the project to
detect leakage. The instruments were deployed from research vessels but
also from remotely operated vehicles (ROVs). Cutting-edge technologies used
by the project include P cable 3-D seismic instrumentation for
high-resolution imaging of pathways for fluid flow getting through the
overburden covering the storage formations, hydro-acoustic methods to
detect gas bubbles ascending from the seabed and chemical sensors to
measure the levels of dissolved CO2 in seawater.

Have you identified potential room for improvement in storage techniques
and technologies?

Yes, we published a best environmental practice guide that can be
downloaded at http://oceanrep.geomar.de/28739/. There we describe how
sub-seabed storage sites should be selected and monitored.
Most notably, when selecting sites, we recommend to avoid geological
structures that may serve as conduits for formation water and gas release,
geological formations containing toxic compounds and low-energy
hydrographic settings with sluggish currents and strongly stratified water
column. Also, storage sites should be established far enough from valuable
natural resources or areas in which biota is already living at its CO2
tolerance limits.
The guide also stresses that overburden, seabed, and water column should be
monitored using 3-D seismic techniques, high-resolution bathymetry or
backscatter mapping of the seabed, hydro-acoustic imaging of gas
accumulations and outlets, video and photo imaging, and chemical detection
of dissolved CO2 in ambient bottom waters. Most of these technologies are
either already available or will soon become state-of-the-art.

ECO2 essentially focused on leakage impact over marine ecosystems. What are
your conclusions?

We learned that if leakage were to occur the impact on the marine ecosystem
would be limited to the immediate surroundings of the leak. In this small
area sensitive organisms would die and would be replaced by other, more
resilient organisms. At a lateral distance of more than 100 metres from the
leak, the impact would be very small and barely detectable since the leaked
CO2 would rapidly be diluted by bottom currents.

Based on the results of the project, would you say that sub-seabed CO2
storage is a viable technique?

Yes, we could not find any signs of leakage at the storage sites which are
currently operated. It is possible that leakage will occur should hundreds
of new storage sites be opened and operated in the future. However, only a
very small fraction of the stored CO2 would leak out and the impact on the
marine environment would remain small and local.

What are your plans now that the project has come to an end?

There is still a lot of work to do: We need to better understand how
leakage rates are controlled by geological structures and physical
processes in the overburden. Moreover, monitoring techniques should be
further improved to enhance their sensitivity and reduce operational costs.

For further information, please visit:

ECO2
http://www.eco2-project.eu/
Source: Based on an interview from issue 43 of research*eu results magazine.

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