In recent years,
the concept of mitigating global climate change through large-scale carbon capture and storage (CCS) into geologic media (saline formations, depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs, and unminable coal seams) has gained worldwide attention. Identifying potential geologic sinks for carbon dioxide (CO2) storage and developing reliable estimates of their storage resource/capacity is a critical component of determining the efficacy of CCS.
While numerous evaluations have been conducted to develop storage resource/capacity estimates for geologic formations throughout the world, they are the product of several different methodologies, and comparison of the results of one evaluation to another is often difficult and misleading.
The IEA Greenhouse Gas Research & Development (R&D) Programme (IEA-GHG) has been working closely with a wide variety of international organizations, including the U. S. Department of Energy (DOE) to develop approaches and methods for developing CO2 storage resource/capacity estimates that can be applied to assessments at the site-specific, local, regional, basin, and country scales. Recently, IEA-GHG and DOE have identified the development of technically robust storage coefficients as being crucial to the advancement of broadly applicable and comparable storage resource/capacity estimates at all scales.