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Evaluating offshore legacy wells for geologic carbon storage: A case study from the Galveston and Brazos areas in the Gulf of Mexico

•Well records enable assessment of hazards and the feasibility of corrective action.•Proposed framework ranks wells based on challenge of corrective action.•Well rankings are valuable for screening potential areas of interest.•Majority of wells considered do not isolate Miocene GCS targets. Federal...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International journal of greenhouse gas control 2024-12, Vol.139, p.104276, Article 104276
Main Authors: Lackey, Greg, Pantaleone, Scott, Montgomery, John K., Busse, Kristen, Aylor, Adam W., Moffett, Tracy J.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Well records enable assessment of hazards and the feasibility of corrective action.•Proposed framework ranks wells based on challenge of corrective action.•Well rankings are valuable for screening potential areas of interest.•Majority of wells considered do not isolate Miocene GCS targets. Federal offshore waters in the Gulf of Mexico are of interest for large-scale geologic carbon storage (GCS). However, more than 80,000 offshore oil and gas wells exist in the region, which could impact the integrity of sealing intervals. In this study, we propose a screening methodology for ranking offshore legacy wells based on the challenge they may present to GCS. The methodology relies on the review of well regulatory records to 1) identify leakage pathways and assess the potential hazards that wells pose to planned GCS operations, 2) evaluate well features that impact the accessibility of wells to determine the feasibility of potential corrective actions, and 3) rank wells based on the overall challenge they may pose for GCS. We demonstrate our framework by evaluating the construction and abandonment of 156 wells across eight areas of interest (AOIs) in shallow federal waters along the Texas Gulf Coast. The majority (99.3 %) of wells considered were constructed and plugged in a manner that did not isolate prospective GCS targets in the Upper and Lower Miocene formations and may potentially require a challenging or uncertain corrective action prior to GCS. Dataset trends suggest that the observed well construction and plugging designs may be common in shallow offshore federal waters along the Texas Gulf Coast. Consequently, operators pursuing offshore GCS projects in the region may consider selecting areas that avoid challenging wells or performing robust evaluations of legacy well leakage risks to plan corrective action prior to CO2 injection. [Display omitted]
ISSN:1750-5836
DOI:10.1016/j.ijggc.2024.104276