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Engineering Aspects of Geologic CO2 Storage

Synergy between Enhanced Oil Recovery and Storage

  • Book
  • © 2017

Overview

  • Details how regulatory constraints and economic drivers can make dedicated CO2 storage projects financially attractive to industry
  • Provides a practical approach to making engineering decisions based on the key parameters of geologic CO2 storage
  • Demonstrates how industrial practitioners can utilize their training to make meaningful contributions in tackling the problem of greenhouse gas emissions via commercial-scale geologic CO2 storage projects
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Part of the book series: SpringerBriefs in Petroleum Geoscience & Engineering (BRIEFSPGE)

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Table of contents (9 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This timely book explores the lessons learned in and potentials of injecting supercritical CO2 into depleted oil and gas reservoirs, in order to maximize both hydrocarbon recovery and the storage capacities of injected CO2.

The author provides a detailed discussion of key engineering parameters of simultaneous CO2 enhanced oil recovery and CO2 storage in depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs. These include candidate site selection, CO2 oil miscibility, maximizing CO2-storage capacity in enhanced oil recovery operations, well configurations, and cap and reservoir rock integrity.

The book will help practicing professionals devise strategies to curb greenhouse gas emissions from the use of fossil fuels for energy production via geologic CO2 storage, while developing CO2 injection as an economically viable and environmentally sensible business model for hydrocarbon exploration and production in a low carbon economy.

 

Authors and Affiliations

  • Department of Physics and Engineering, California State University, Bakersfield, USA

    Dayanand Saini

About the author

Dr. Dayanand Saini is currently an Assistant Professor of Petroleum Engineering at California State University, Bakersfield (CSUB), where, apart from teaching various core engineering and petroleum engineering electives and developing the petroleum engineering program, as a co-principal investigator for a four-year-long Notational Science Foundation (NSF) funded multimillion dollar research project, he is investigating the feasibility of using CO2 injection as a drive mechanism to produce water formation for beneficial reuses. 

Prior to joining CSUB, Dr. Saini worked as Research Manager-Reservoir Engineering at the Energy and Environmental Research Center (EERC) of the University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, ND, where he supervised and managed compositional reservoir simulation, special core analysis (SCAL), and other reservoir engineering related activities for two multimillion-dollar projects. Simultaneously, he worked on CO2 enhanced oil recovery (EOR) and storage demonstration projects funded by the US Department of Energy (DOE)-National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL). He also conducted CO2 EOR potential evaluation studies of candidate (depleted) oil fields as per client’s needs, and worked as Reservoir Engineer with Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited, India, from 2001 to 2006.

 Dr. Saini has authored and co-authored several journal articles in the area of geologic CO2 storage (GCS) and has assisted industry clients in making essential business decisions when acquiring depleted oil fields. In November 2015, in recognition of the significant research conducted in the last five years, he was nominated for the €200,000 “Protection of the Environment” Award by the ENI, an Italian multinational oil and gas company headquartered in Rome, in 2016.

 

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