Leakage risks of geologic CO2 storage and the impacts on the global energy system and climate change mitigation

被引:1
|
作者
Hang Deng
Jeffrey M. Bielicki
Michael Oppenheimer
Jeffrey P. Fitts
Catherine A. Peters
机构
[1] Princeton University,Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
[2] Energy Geosciences Division,Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geodetic Engineering
[3] Earth and EnvironmentalSciences Area,The John Glenn College of Public Affairs
[4] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,Department of Geosciences
[5] The Ohio State University,Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs
[6] The Ohio State University,undefined
[7] Princeton University,undefined
[8] Princeton University,undefined
来源
Climatic Change | 2017年 / 144卷
关键词
Carbon capture, utilization and storage; Geologic CO; storage; Leakage risk; Climate change mitigation; Integrated assessment modeling; GCAM; Carbon tax; Representative concentration pathways;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study investigated how subsurface and atmospheric leakage from geologic CO2 storage reservoirs could impact the deployment of Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) in the global energy system. The Leakage Risk Monetization Model was used to estimate the costs of leakage for representative CO2 injection scenarios, and these costs were incorporated into the Global Change Assessment Model. Worst-case scenarios of CO2 leakage risk, which assume that all leakage pathway permeabilities are extremely high, were simulated. Even with this extreme assumption, the associated costs of monitoring, treatment, containment, and remediation resulted in minor shifts in the global energy system. For example, the reduction in CCS deployment in the electricity sector was 3% for the “high” leakage scenario, with replacement coming from fossil fuel and biomass without CCS, nuclear power, and renewable energy. In other words, the impact on CCS deployment under a realistic leakage scenario is likely to be negligible. We also quantified how the resulting shifts will impact atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Under a carbon tax that achieves an atmospheric CO2 concentration of 480 ppm in 2100, technology shifts due to leakage costs would increase this concentration by less than 5 ppm. It is important to emphasize that this increase does not result from leaked CO2 that reaches the land surface, which is minimal due to secondary trapping in geologic strata above the storage reservoir. The overall conclusion is that leakage risks and associated costs will likely not interfere with the effectiveness of policies for climate change mitigation.
引用
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页码:151 / 163
页数:12
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