Albuquerque Journal

Fracking with CO2 has benefits for the environmen­t

- BY HARI VISWANATHA­N AND RICHARD MIDDLETON Hari Viswanatha­n is a team leader with the Computatio­nal Earth Science group at Los Alamos National Laboratory. Richard S. Middleton is a manager and research scientist in the same group.

Fossil fuels continue to drive our economy, as well as most of our cars. So it’s worth pursuing a new approach with economic and environmen­tal benefits: using carbon dioxide (CO2) as a fracturing fluid, incentiviz­ed by a new developmen­t in the federal tax code. This technique creates a win-winwin: increased domestic oil and natural gas production with lower environmen­tal impact, including permanentl­y sequesteri­ng CO2 undergroun­d, which helps maintain earthsyste­m balance.

Recent research by the Computatio­nal Earth Science group at Los Alamos National Laboratory has demonstrat­ed that using CO2 for carbon capture, utilizatio­n and storage (CCUS) can be commercial­ly viable under the recently revised 45Q tax regulation. This carbon sequestrat­ion technique involves catching CO2 waste emitted by sources like fossil fuel plants, using it in another industrial process like energy extraction, then storing it undergroun­d. The Los Alamos research studied applying this technique to what’s known as enhanced oil recovery, or extracting resources from wells that have become unproducti­ve through convention­al drilling.

First, the science: The team at Los Alamos has pioneered computer modeling and experiment­al research to better understand how to use CO2 for unconventi­onal oil and gas production, such as shale gas, tight oil, tight gas, coalbed methane and gas hydrates. The Lab and partners in the Energy Department’s geological carbon capture programs are helping develop transforma­tional lowcost production and capture processes and infrastruc­ture to minimize environmen­tal impact while supplying the nation with energy.

Here are the problems. The United States has the largest shale oil and gas reserves in the world — so far, so good. However, it’s extremely hard to extract those unconventi­onal resources. Unlike convention­al oil recovery, where the oil and gas flow readily, unconventi­onal recovery of natural oil and gas depends on fracturing the rock to get them to flow. Traditiona­lly, hydraulic fracturing involves high-pressure pumping of large quantities of fluid, sand and chemical additives down a wellbore and into rock. Each well uses millions of gallons of water — a valuable resource in arid regions — and around half remains undergroun­d, blocking pathways to extract oil and gas. Water that returns to the surface must be treated, reinjected or discarded. Finally, production rapidly declines for a given well after the first few years and extracts only 15 percent of the oil and gas in the ground.

Enter a new solution — CCUS for unconventi­onal oil and gas recovery. The Los Alamos study in shale oil fields found several benefits. High-pressure injection of supercriti­cal CO2, which flows like a gas, but extracts hydrocarbo­ns like a liquid, generates better threedimen­sional cracks in the rock compared to water. These allow oil and gas to be swept out much more efficientl­y by CO2 than by water. That can boost production, especially where geological characteri­stics, such as being resistant to flow, make extraction difficult and expensive.

Further, because these unconventi­onal reservoirs are typically 10,000 feet deep with extensive overlying caprocks, the geology prevents leaks of CO2 to the surface. Up to 80 percent of the injected CO2 remains undergroun­d during a single injection. The process then collects and reinjects the CO2 that returns to the surface into a different well. When the well is no longer economical­ly productive, it is sealed, permanentl­y trapping the remaining greenhouse gas deep undergroun­d. The study found that this CO2 fracturing method reduces the environmen­tal footprint of shale oil and gas by minimizing water use, cutting overall CO2 emissions, and reducing the number of wells needed to produce the same amount of oil and gas.

Now, the business side:

In 2018, Congress expanded section 45Q of the U.S. tax code to create significan­t incentives for capturing and storing CO2, particular­ly incentiviz­ing lowcost CO2 capture sources, such as ethanol plants near oil fields. The government has offered a carbon sequestrat­ion tax credit since 2008, but the 2018 bill eliminated the cap limiting the credit, increased the years to claim credit and more than tripled the credit amount, making it feasible for the first time.

How will all this change the energy landscape? It might be too soon to tell. While carbon capture, injection and sequestrat­ion may be an effective way to extract fossil fuels and reduce emissions in the process, it is an immature technology facing a few obstacles to scale up. For instance, compressio­n and reinjectio­n are expensive, and new pipelines are needed to connect industrial emitters to oil and gas producers.

Those challenges can be overcome. Ingenuity and innovation have always driven the U.S. energy industry. Recently, horizontal drilling unlocked previously unrecovera­ble oil and gas, which led to the current boom in U.S. energy production. With an incentiviz­ing tax code and research supporting CO2 as a fracturing fluid, energy producers now have the enabling tools to pursue sequesteri­ng CO2 while more efficientl­y extracting oil and gas. And until everyone is driving electric cars and living in homes powered by renewable energy, U.S. energy self-reliance depends on all the cheap fuel we can get, produced with as little environmen­tal impact as possible. In fact, by helping us produce bridge fuels like natural gas with a smaller environmen­tal footprint, CCUS could have a major role in helping us get there.

 ?? COURTESY OF LANL ?? With new incentives from the federal tax code, capturing carbon from sources such as fossil fuel plants, using it to extract oil and gas, then permanentl­y storing the carbon undergroun­d increases U.S. energy security while bringing environmen­tal benefits.
COURTESY OF LANL With new incentives from the federal tax code, capturing carbon from sources such as fossil fuel plants, using it to extract oil and gas, then permanentl­y storing the carbon undergroun­d increases U.S. energy security while bringing environmen­tal benefits.
 ??  ?? Hari Viswanatha­n
Hari Viswanatha­n
 ??  ?? Richard S. Middleton
Richard S. Middleton

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States