EGU2020-21528
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-21528
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Assessment of CO2-EOR and its geo-storage potential in oil reservoirs of Precaspian basin, Kazakhstan

Nurlan Seisenbayev, Yerdaulet Abuov, Zhanat Tolenbekova, and Woojin Lee
Nurlan Seisenbayev et al.
  • Nazarbayev University, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan (woojin.lee@nu.edu.kz)

Precaspian basin is the most petroliferous basin in Kazakhstan with more than 100 years of history of the oil and gas industry. The economy of the country has been depending on the revenues coming from the sale of Precaspian oil. Nevertheless, the average oil recovery rate in the country remains low around 30-35% and its government planned to increase the recovery rate to 55-60%. The high oil recovery rate could be achieved by enhanced oil recovery (EOR) methods by injecting diverse inert gases and liquids. The global challenge of excessive CO2 emissions makes an EOR with CO2 injection (CO2-EOR) a good candidate because the anthropogenic CO2 emission could be a good source of the injection gas. Depleted oil reservoirs are the first targets for the implementation of carbon storage. The basin contains 178 oil and gas fields distributed in pre-salt and post-salt sections divided by the huge Kungurian salt bed that deformed into domes throughout the basin. A set of suitable reservoir parameters (Original Oil In Place (OOIP), depth, API, pressure, porosity, permeability, initial oil saturation) for CO2-EOR have been identified by earlier works of researchers based on previous experience of the petroleum industry and used to screen the oil reservoirs of the Precaspian basin. Thirty-four reservoirs of the basin were identified to be suitable for CO2-EOR or CO2 storage. The effective CO2 storage capacity of the reservoirs has been estimated using the Carbon Sequestration Leadership Forum (CSLF) method. The previous estimation of the storage capacity of 178 reservoirs was 179.2 Mt of CO2 however, after the CO2-EOR screening, the capacity decreased to 24.4 Mt. The mapping of CO2 sources and investigation of CO2 amount released from each CO2 source in the Precaspian basin will contribute to the CO2 source-CO2 sink matching to decide the most feasible CCS options. In addition, the analysis of fault intensity and seismicity in suitable reservoir-seal pairs could have important implications for the safety of CO2 storage.

How to cite: Seisenbayev, N., Abuov, Y., Tolenbekova, Z., and Lee, W.: Assessment of CO2-EOR and its geo-storage potential in oil reservoirs of Precaspian basin, Kazakhstan, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-21528, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-21528, 2020

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