The CHIMNEY project
Researching hazards involved in the storage of carbon dioxide in North Sea depleted oil & gas reservoirs & saline aquifers
Carbon dioxide geological storage (or sequestration) is the placement of atmospheric, human produced CO 2 into underground geological formations, where it can be permanently stored away from the atmosphere, in order to mitigate or defer global warming and avoid dangerous climate change. It requires deep porous layers of rock capped by several layers of impermeable rock. Suitable formations include depleted oil and gas reservoirs and deep saline reservoirs.
Researching hazards involved in the storage of carbon dioxide in North Sea depleted oil & gas reservoirs & saline aquifers
Imitating natural storage of carbon dioxide observed in basaltic rocks in Icelandic geothermal fields
Seafloor mineral carbonation as a guide to improved geological carbon storage
Undersea gas leakages whether natural or man-made, represent an environmental hazard
Quantifying how biological systems to sequester carbon and supply clean carbon energy