Quantifying CO2 Leak Rates in Aquatic Environments

15 Pages Posted: 4 Apr 2019 Last revised: 20 Apr 2019

See all articles by Jennifer J. Roberts

Jennifer J. Roberts

University of Strathclyde - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

Andrew Feitz

Geoscience Australia

Jade Anderson

Geoscience Australia

Ivan Schroder

Geoscience Australia

Date Written: October 23, 2018

Abstract

The Daylesford region of Victoria (Australia), is a region of natural CO2 seepage. Small bubble streams of CO2 are released into ephemeral river beds proximal to mineral springs that contain high dissolved CO2 content. We study four sites of CO2 degassing to (i) establish the characteristics of CO2 seepage caused by transport to surface of CO2-rich water, (ii) provide an estimate of CO2 flux in the region, and (iii) investigate seasonal effects on CO2 seepage. We observe that bubbling behavior varies considerably between sites, including the number and distribution of bubbling points, and bubble stream the continuity. Total CO2 seep rates at each site were low (< 20 kg/d) but varied substantially between different sites. There were no obvious indicators of total emission rate; the bubble density or other characteristics at the highest emission seep were not remarkably different to the smaller seeps. We find that the total CO2 emission varies inconsistently with season, with some seep rates increasing and other decreasing in the dry season when water levels are lower. We find there are challenges in quantifying the total gas leakage at sites of highly localized and intermittent degassing. Our work has implications for detecting and quantifying leaks from engineered CO2 storage sites which emerge in aqueous environments, which could be these are marine or terrestrial (lakes or rivers).

Keywords: Leakage; monitoring; natural analogue; seasonality

Suggested Citation

Roberts, Jennifer J. and Feitz, Andrew and Anderson, Jade and Schroder, Ivan, Quantifying CO2 Leak Rates in Aquatic Environments (October 23, 2018). 14th Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies Conference Melbourne 21-26 October 2018 (GHGT-14) , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3366266 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3366266

Jennifer J. Roberts (Contact Author)

University of Strathclyde - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering ( email )

Glasgow
United Kingdom

Andrew Feitz

Geoscience Australia ( email )

Canberra, ACT 2601
Australia

Jade Anderson

Geoscience Australia

Canberra, ACT 2601
Australia

Ivan Schroder

Geoscience Australia

Canberra, ACT 2601
Australia

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