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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Environmental Geosciences (DEG)
Abstract
DOI: 10.1046/j.1526-0984.2001.008003218.x
Subsurface CO2 Disposal with Enhanced Gas Recovery and Biogeochemical
Carbon
Recycling
Carbon
Recycling HITOSHI KOIDE 1 and KENICHI YAMAZAKI 2
1Research Institute of Innovative Technology for the Earth (RITE), 9-2, Kizugawadai, Kizu-cho, Soraku-gun, Kyoto, 619-0292 Japan
2Mitsui Mining Engineering Co., Ltd., 1-13-10, Hattyobori, Chuo, Tokyo, 104-0032 Japan
ABSTRACT
An enormous amount of methane has accumulated in the shallow
subsurface in many part of the world. However, most of this natural
gas resource is not economically recoverable at the present time
as the methane is adsorbed in coal seams, trapped in methane hydrate
(clathrate), or dissolved in saline groundwater. Shallow accumulations
of methane pose the threat of potentially increasing the
rate of global warming. Enhanced gas recovery by subsurface CO2
injection (CO2-EGR) is potentially an option for greenhouse gas
control, combined with use of potential energy resources. CO2 injection
coupled with extraction of coal mine methane and coal-bed
methane may make emission-free closed circuit power plants possible.
Coal seams in Japan and under the seabed around Japan
could potentially adsorb about 10 Gtonnes of CO2 and in so doing
displace 2.5 trillion cubic meters of coal-bed methane. About 12
Gtonnes of CO2 could potentially be sequestered in hydrate layers,
displacing 6 trillion cubic meters of methane hydrate under the
deep seabed around Japan. Similarly, about 26 Gtonnes of CO2
could potentially be sequestered in saline groundwater, displacing
6 trillion cubic meters of methane in sedimentary basins in Japan.
CO2-EGR could potentially sequester a total of 48 Gtonnes of CO2
in and around the Japanese Islands, with the prospect of also having
enhanced production of nearly 10 trillion cubic meters of methane.
The extremely light isotopic compositions of
carbon
in methane
suggest that methanogens formed many of the subsurface
accumulations of methane-rich natural gas in the world. Chemolithotrophic
methanogens form methane from CO2, thereby obtaining
energy without sunlight under anoxic circumstances. Methanogens
are often blamed for greenhouse gas emissions as they
produce methane in organisms and in rice paddies, for example.
However, application of CO2-EGR for production of subsurface
biogenic methane displaced by
sequestration
of CO2 might result
in enhanced
carbon
recycling. Present-day subsurface ecosystems
are probably somewhat similar to ancient ecosystems adapted to
exist in an anoxic CO2-rich atmosphere under high pressure and
temperature. Biogenic methanogenesis is thought to occur even in
deep basaltic aquifers offering the opportunity for deep subsurface
biogeochemical
carbon
recycling utilizing CO2-EGR to produce
enhanced
sequestration
of greenhouse gases accompanied by the
development of potential new energy resources.
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