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Long-Term Annular Sealing of CO2 Injection and Storage Wells Using Shale Barriers

CO2圧入・貯留井の長期環状シーリングにおけるシェールバリアの利用 (AI 翻訳)

E. van Oort, A. Lucas, J. Kverneland, R. Godøy, H. Reitan, M. Aldin, A. Thombare

SPE Journal📚 査読済 / ジャーナル2026-03-01#CCUS経営インパクト: コスト削減対象セクター: oil_and_gas
DOI: 10.2118/221080-pa
原典: https://doi.org/10.2118/221080-pa

🤖 gxceed AI 要約

日本語

本論文では、CO2圧入・貯留井の環状バリアとしてシェール層のクリープ特性を利用する手法を実験的に検証。従来のセメントバリアと異なり、温度変動やCO2化学攻撃に耐え、長期的な密封性を維持できることを示した。CCS技術の信頼性向上に貢献する。

English

This paper experimentally investigates the use of creeping shale formations as annular barriers in CO2 injection and storage wells. Unlike conventional cement barriers, shale barriers withstand temperature cycling and CO2 chemical attack, maintaining pressure integrity. The results promise enhanced long-term well integrity for carbon storage.

Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.

📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters

日本のGX文脈において

日本ではCCS実証(苫小牧等)が進むが、井戸の長期健全性は重要課題。本成果は、セメント代替としてシェールバリアの可能性を示し、国内のCO2貯留井設計に新たな選択肢を提供する。

In the global GX context

Globally, CCS scale-up requires reliable well barriers. This study provides experimental evidence that shale barriers outperform cement under CO2 injection conditions, directly addressing a key risk in carbon storage projects. The findings could influence well construction standards and regulation.

👥 読者別の含意

🔬研究者:Provides experimental validation of shale creep as a barrier mechanism under CO2 injection conditions, offering a basis for further modeling and field trials.

🏢実務担当者:Demonstrates a potentially superior alternative to cement for annular isolation in CCS wells, reducing risk of CO2 leakage and long-term maintenance costs.

🏛政策担当者:Highlights the need for flexible well integrity guidelines that accommodate novel barrier materials like shale, especially for large-scale CCS deployment.

📄 Abstract(原文)

As part of the energy transition and the aim to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, more carbon in the form of carbon dioxide (CO2) will be captured and stored underground in wells intersecting suitable reservoirs for storage in future. The long-term integrity of such wells is a considerable concern, given that CO2 can react with Portland cement and steel, which can erode well barriers over time. Moreover, low temperatures and temperature cycling in injection and storage wells can lead to cement cracking and debonding from casing, creating annular flow paths for CO2 to surface and allowing for CO2 to attack cement more severely. In this paper, we report on an investigation into using creeping shale formations as alternative annular barriers providing integrity during CO2 injection and long-term storage. Building upon previous work done as part of our ongoing shale-as-a-barrier (SAAB) investigation, rock mechanical laboratory investigations were conducted into the behavior of shale creep in wells experiencing CO2 injection. A special experimental setup was constructed to be able to establish an annular shale barrier at simulated field conditions (using either in-situ formation temperature or thermal stimulation) and then testing this barrier during simulated CO2 injection conditions. During CO2 injection, the well will experience significant reductions and increases in temperature, which can lead to, e.g., the debonding of cement from the casing and the formation of a microannulus that compromises the annular barrier. Note that temperature cycling in wells is a leading cause of the loss of annular isolation and the associated flow to surface of formation fluids and gases in oil and gas wells. In the experiments, shale barriers were first generated and verified at a variety of in-situ and elevated temperatures (which affect shale creep rate). These barriers were then subjected to a significant temperature reduction, as well as temperature cycling with wellbore temperatures reaching a low value of −14°C (7°F), followed by periods where temperature was allowed to rise back up to in-situ conditions. In all cases, the shale barrier continued to function and maintain annular pressure integrity, indicating that well temperature reduction and cycling associated with CO2 injection will not negatively affect it. This is a promising result and insight because the same cannot be guaranteed for a Portland cement barrier. In addition, shale barriers are impervious to any chemical attack by CO2 and are expected to last for a very long time period, given that we are dealing with actual caprock material. Carbon storage wells present new challenges to well construction. These include the low absolute temperatures and large cyclic temperature cycles during CO2 injection, which could lead to cement debonding and microannulus formation providing a pathway for CO2 migration to the surface, as well as chemical attack of cement and casing by CO2 during long-term storage. This work shows that creeping shale formations can deal with both challenges and provide a superior annular isolation solution when compared with conventional Portland cement. The work could have large positive implications for how (barriers in) carbon storage wells will be constructed in the future, and how permanent storage of CO2 underground can be achieved.

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