New Haven, WV
- Deep beneath much of the United States lie rock formations containing waters
far too salty for human consumption. Long overlooked, these brine-filled
reservoirs are now attracting new interest as possible "storage sites" for
greenhouse gases emitted from power plants.

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Deep
saline formations underlie much of the United States including many areas
where power plants are concentrated. [Click on map for larger image.]
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The
U.S. Department of Energy has given the go-ahead to a research team headed
by American Electric Power (AEP) and Battelle to begin studying potential
sites in the Ohio River Valley where carbon dioxide – a greenhouse gas emitted
when coal and other fuels are burned – might one day be injected deep underground
where it would remain safely and permanently trapped.
AEP
has volunteered its Mountaineer Plant in New Haven, WV, along the Ohio-West
Virginia border as the test site for investigating the concept.
If
the approach proves feasible, it could offer a way for many electric and
industrial plants to reduce emissions believed to contribute to global climate
change. The AEP/Battelle project will be especially important because it
will take place in the heart of the largest concentration of fossil fuel
power plants in the nation.
Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham
announced the new "carbon sequestration" effort at a speech today before
the National Coal Council, an advisory panel to the Department of Energy.
"Our
goal is to develop a suite of carbon management options that we know are
safe, affordable, and effective. We want to have these options ready should
the science tell us that large-scale carbon reductions are necessary in the
future," Abraham said.
Abraham said that if carbon sequestration
– the capture and permanent storage of carbon gases – proves practical, it
could help mitigate environmental concerns regarding the use of coal. Coal
supplies more than half of the nation's electricity and is one of the reasons
why Americans benefit from some of the lowest cost electricity in the world.
Theoretically,
deep saline reservoirs, which underlie all or part of 35 states, could hold
all of the carbon dioxide emitted from the nation's coal-burning power plants
over the next 100 years.
Beneath the Ohio-West Virginia
border lies the massive Mt. Simon Sandstone saline formation. Ranging from
3,000 to 12,000 feet deep, this huge formation extends as far as Illinois
and Wisconsin. Several other potential host reservoirs for carbon dioxide
storage are also in the area.
The project's current phase is
expected to last 18 months. During this time, researchers will conduct a
seismic survey within a 5- to 10-mile radius of the Mountaineer Plant to
study the characteristics of the underground rock formations. Early next
year, a 10,000-foot well will be drilled on the plant property to study the
target area and overlying sediment layers in detail.
Data
will be used for simulations, risk assessments, permit applications, and
to design the monitoring plans for future stages of the effort if the site
proves geologically sound. No decision will be made on proceeding beyond
the current study phase until the subsurface geology is deemed suitable for
permanently entrapping large quantities of carbon dioxide and cost estimates
are developed.
Using deep saline reservoirs for carbon dioxide
storage is attractive not only because the reservoirs are common but because
they are well below drinking water aquifers. In the Ohio River Valley, drinking
water is typically produced from formations only 10 to 200 feet below ground,
compared to the 3,000- to 12,000-foot depths of the saline formations.
Geologists
believe the distance between fresh water and possible injection zones is
so great and the intervening rock layers so impervious to the upward movement
of carbon dioxide that the approach will pose no hazard to drinking water.
Indeed, a major question the AEP/Battelle project hopes to answer is whether
rocks above possible "storage" areas are sturdy enough and sufficiently free
of interconnected fractures to assure that the carbon dioxide cannot gradually
escape.
The Department, through its National Energy Technology
Laboratory (NETL), is providing $3.2 million of the project's total $4.2
million cost. Other partners providing financial and in-kind support include
AEP, BP, Battelle, and Schlumberger. The Ohio Coal Development Office, part
of Ohio's Department of Development, is also supporting the project. Results
will lead to significant improvements in understanding the geology of potential
carbon dioxide injection zones in southeastern Ohio. Should coal-based power
plants be required to reduce carbon dioxide emissions in the future, the
deep injection concept could play a major role in preserving jobs that these
plants and Ohio coal mines support.
Technical support will
be provided by experts from NETL, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory,
West Virginia University, the Ohio Division of Geological Survey, The Ohio
State University, and others.
-End of Techline-
For more information, contact:
News Media: Drew Malcomb, DOE Office of Public Affairs, 202/586-5806
General Information: Robert C. Porter, DOE Office of Fossil Energy, 202/586-6503
Technical Information: Scott Klara, DOE National Energy Technology Laboratory, 412/386-4864