Register      Login
The APPEA Journal The APPEA Journal Society
Journal of the Australian Petroleum Production & Exploration Association (APPEA)
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The Petrel Sub-basin: a world-class CO2 store – mapping and modelling of a scalable and commercially viable CCS development

Rosie Johnstone A * and Linda Stalker B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Full Circle Carbon, Perth, WA, Australia.

B CSIRO Energy, Kensington, WA, Australia.

* Correspondence to: rosie@fullcirclecarbon.com

The APPEA Journal 62(1) 263-280 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ21092
Submitted: 20 December 2021  Accepted: 14 February 2022   Published: 13 May 2022

© 2022 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of APPEA.

Abstract

In 2021, the Australian Government announced a round of offshore greenhouse gas acreage release, including an area where research by Shell/CSIRO in 2016/2017 indicated close to 1 Gt carbon dioxide storage potential within the Mesozoic sediments of the Sandpiper, Elang and Plover Formations of the Petrel Sub-basin. The joint Shell/CSIRO study assessed key containment issues (legacy wells, potentially conductive faults, top seal extent) and storage formation connectivity. To study containment risk, CSIRO assessed a single injection well scenario and concluded that injection of up to 20 MTPA would not create geomechanical failure. Based on these findings, a ~5000 km2 area of interest southeast of the Petrel Field was proposed as suitable for injection in the Plover/Elang formations. The Shell team constructed topographical dynamic models at five potential locations. Three further models were built to simulate a base case and two end-member scenarios: (1) high permeability (leak point risk) and (2) low-pressure dissipation (top seal risk). The study showed that the development of two injector wells at one of the locations could safely and conservatively store 149 Mt, injected over a period of 30 years. Similar capacity is expected at four out of the five locations identified within the investigated area. Expansion to >2 injection wells per location, additional injection into the Sandpiper Formation and expansion to the west of the initially mapped focus area all point to achievable gigatonne storage potential. The joint study significantly expanded the understanding of the storage capacity, with recommendations for further data acquisition in both greenhouse gas (GHG) permits (GHG21-1 and GHG21-2).

Keywords: carbon capture and storage, CCS, CO2 plume migration, containment, dynamic modelling, Elang, injectivity, low emissions hub, Northern Australia, Petrel Sub-basin, Plover, polygonal faults, Sandpiper, sandstone, storage capacity.

Rosie Johnstone is the Director of Full Circle Carbon, based in Perth, Australia. She has 25+ years’ experience in both oil and gas exploration and carbon capture and storage (CCS) across Australia, the Asia-Pacific region and the UK. From 2015 to 2021, Rosie was Shell’s focal point for CCS sink identification in the Australia/Asia-Pacific region, from high-level screening to injection site planning. She is now a CCS consultant working with clients, including GeoVault and Buru Energy. Rosie graduated from the University of Liverpool (UK) in 1990 with a BSc (Hons) in Geology.

Dr Linda Stalker obtained a BSc (Hons) in Applied Geology from the University of Strathclyde, Scotland, in 1990. Her PhD on petroleum geochemistry and CO2 generation was gained at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK. In 1994, she joined the University of Oklahoma (USA) on a Department of Energy sponsored post-doctoral study into organosulfur compounds trapped in coals. From 1996, she worked in petroleum exploration and production (E&P) at Statoil, Norway, including 2 years on the Sleipner Field. She joined CSIRO in 2000 and has held numerous positions while maintaining research expertise in hydrocarbon E&P and carbon storage research.


References

Carbon Storage Taskforce (2009) National Carbon Mapping and Infrastructure Plan – Australia: Full Report. (Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism: Canberra)

Cinar Y (2013) Appendix G Core analysis results of Petrel 1, Jacaranda 1, Gull 1 and Tern 1, Petrel Sub-basin. The University of New South Wales. School of Petroleum Engineering Core Analysis Laboratory.

Clennell B, White C, Giwelli A, Myers M (2018) Northern Australia CO2 Storage Project: Plume Mobility and Trapping: Analogue Core Flooding Experiments Milestone Report. CSIRO Report EP 184383. p. 62.

Consoli CP, Higgins K, Jorgensen D, Khider K, Lescinsky DT, Morris R, Nguyen V (2013) Regional assessment of the CO2 storage potential of the Mesozoic succession in the Petrel Sub-basin, Northern Territory, Australia: summary report. Record 2014/11. Geoscience Australia, Canberra.
| Crossref |

Cundall PA, Board M (1988) A microcomputer program for modelling large-strain plasticity problems. In ‘Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Numerical methods in Geomechanics: Numerical Methods in Geomechanics, Vol. 6 ’. (Ed. G Swoboda) pp. 2101–2108. Published on behalf of the International Committee for Numerical Methods in Geomechanics by A.A. Balkema: Netherlands.

Dewhurst D, Zhang Y, Schaubs, P, Stalker L, Michael K (2019) Preliminary geomechanical modelling of fault reactivation potential during CO2 injection for the Northern CO2 Store Project, Petrel Sub-basin, NW Australia. CSIRO EP191035, March 2019. p. 64.

Furre, A-K, Eiken, O, Alnes, H, Vevatne, JN, and Kiӕr, AF (2017). 20 years of monitoring CO2 - injection at Sleipner. Energy Procedia 114, 3916–3926.
20 years of monitoring CO2 - injection at Sleipner.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Hortle A, Trefry C (2012) Petrel Sub-basin Hydrodynamic Assessment. CSIRO Report No EP135505, Australia, p. 40.

Itasca (2005) FLAC3D Fast Lagrangian Analysis of Continua in 3 Dimensions, User Manual, Version 3.1. (Itasca Consulting Group, Inc.: Minneapolis)

Nguyen V, Morris R (2013) Appendix B. Petrophysical analysis of potential Mesozoic-Cenozoic CO2 storage reservoirs of the Petrel Sub-basin. (Geoscience Australia)

Peksa, AE, Wolf, K-HAA, and Zitha, PLJ (2015). Bentheimer sandstone revisited for experimental purposes. Marine and Petroleum Geology 67, 701–719.
Bentheimer sandstone revisited for experimental purposes.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Phillips Z (2017) Northern Australia CO2 Store Well Abandonment Review. (Shell Australia Pty Ltd)

Seldon L, Lynn G, Tucker O (2017) Identification of a storage prospect: dynamic evaluation of CO2 injection Elang/Plover Formations of the Petrel sub-basin, Western Australia and Northern Territories, Australia, Northern Australia CO2 Store. SR.17.00000. (Shell Global Solutions International: Aberdeen)

Stalker, L, Dewhurst, D, Zhang, Y, Schaubs, P, Clennell, B, Suhardiman, Y, Maxwell, A, Masserano, F, Boccuni, F, Toscano, C, and Castano, D (2020). Evaluation of the Petrel Sub-basin as a northern Australia CO2 store: future decarbonisation hub? The APPEA Journal 60, 765–772.
Evaluation of the Petrel Sub-basin as a northern Australia CO2 store: future decarbonisation hub?Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Torres J, Dixon M, Johnstone R (2016) Northern Australia CO2 Store – Geological Assessment of Petrel Sub Basin. EXP_GEN_012425. (Shell Australia: Perth)

Zhang, Y, Langhi, L, Delle Piane, C, Schaubs, P, Dewhurst, D, Stalker, L, and Michael, K (2015). Geomechanical stability of CO2 containment at the Southwest Hub, Western Australia: a coupled geomechanical-fluid flow modelling approach. International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control 37, 12–23.
Geomechanical stability of CO2 containment at the Southwest Hub, Western Australia: a coupled geomechanical-fluid flow modelling approach.Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |