2019 AIChE Annual Meeting
(559f) MVA Lessons Learned from Ccus Project at the Farnsworth Unit, Texas
Beginning in early 2019, the SWP has shifted to âpost-closureâ monitoring activities. These MVA activities will be a continuation of critical risk-based activities necessary to evaluate fluid (CO2and/or brine) migration (intended or unintended) at the FWU. The ongoing activities include regular monitoring of USDW groundwater, surface CO2emissions, time-lapse seismic for CO2plume assessment, continuous monitoring of microseismicity, and downhole sensors to monitor temperature/pressure. The FWU operator will continue to utilize CO2for EOR activities and the SWP will continue to track fluid injection/production/flare data accounting. The MVA program at the FWU will utilize new or updated activities to provide additional data to other SWP working groups in an attempt to resolve any gaps in understanding of the Farnsworth Unit EOR system.
The MVA program will continue to evaluate past, current and future monitoring activities for efficacy and lessons learned. The best practices of FWU monitoring will serve as a blueprint for regional, economically-viable, commercial-scale CCUS.
Funding for this project is provided by the U.S. Department of Energy under Award No. DE-FC26-05NT42591.