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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Environmental Geosciences (DEG)
Abstract
DOI: 10.1046/j.1526-0984.2001.008003149.x
Geological Sequestration of Carbon Dioxide
John Bradshaw 1 and
Peter Cook 2
1John Bradshaw is Project Manager of Project 1 (Regional Analysis) in the GEODISC
research project at the Australian Petroleum Cooperative Research Centre. He
has a B.Sc. (Honours) and Ph.D. in Applied Geology from the University of New
South Wales. John is an exploration technologist, with a regional knowledge
of Australian sedimentary basins, and is employed as a Principal Research Scientist
at the Australian Geological Survey Organisation. He has also worked for Esso
(Australia) and on staff exchange for a year with WMC Petroleum and Ampolex/Mobil.
He has extensive fieldwork experience throughout central Australia and Papua
New Guinea, where he consulted for several years. John has previously run major
industry-funded research projects examining the petroleum systems of Australia.
He is a member of GSA, PESA, and AAPG.
2Peter Cook is currently Executive Director of the Australian Petroleum Cooperative
Research Centre (APCRC) and a director of various companies. Previous positions
include Senior Research Fellow (Australian National University), Division Chief-Associate
Director (Australian Geological Survey), and Director of the British Geological
Survey (1990–1998). It was during his time as Director of BGS that he became
interested in the issue of geological sequestration of CO2, and on
his return to Australia he established the GEODISC program of the APCRC. He has
acted as an adviser to government organizations and companies in Europe, Asia,
Australia, and North America, and he has held academic positions in Australia,
the United States, France, and the United Kingdom. Peter Cook holds degrees in
geology from the United Kingdom, Australia, and the United States. His research
career has included studies of the sedimentology, geochemistry, and economic
geology of ancient and modern environments in both inland and coastal parts of
Australia and the evolution of Australia over the past 500 million years. He
was leader of a major UNESCO program on phosphate deposits, was involved in various
international marine programs, and for a number of years has been chairman of
a major program of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission. In recent
years he has been involved in examining the role of the earth sciences in global
environmental and ocean issues, including CO2 sequestration, in sustaining
the global resource base and in energy issues. He is the author or coauthor of
many books and research papers. He is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological
Sciences and Engineering and a member of the AAPG, the Geological Society of
London, and the Geological Society of Australia.
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