Heading Out wrote:

> If it is below the critical depth where
> it turns to a liquid under the pressure,
> then it will likely be absorbed into the oil,
> thinning it and reducing its adhesion

First contact miscibility certainly exists, but it's very rare to base an EOR scheme around this mechanism. FCM is very uneconomical of injected gas - you can get excellent results with much more dilute solvents.

> If it is injected as a gas...then it
> stays in the formation displacing...

Gas is pretty mobile stuff - it's perfectly capable of finding its way into a producer by itself if you're careless or unlucky, or if you wait long enough. Why do you think BP needs 7 bcf/d of gas compression at Prudhoe Bay? They sure don't have that much miscible solvent available! Sure, you'll drill & perf the wells to avoid the gas, but it will get through eventually.

And please don't let's give our readership the impression that gas injection - CO2 or otherwise - is anything new. It's being going on for many decades in a large percentage of the world's oilfields, large and small. The new thing is the carbon sequestration angle - and if you're getting your CO2 from flue gas, even $60 oil isn't always going to make it economical.

The only reason I mentioned it is because of its connection with Clean Coal.  The impression that I get from Clean Coal advocates is that CO2 for EOR is a way of sequestering the CO2 from coal plants thereby reducing emissions.

From the responses

  1. you cannot guarantee that the CO2 is sequestered safely.

  2. As the CO2 is recycled there is not enough CO2 needed for offsetting the huge amounts of CO2 produced from power plants.

Sorry a bit off topic however it does go to the sustainable use of fossil fuels and clearly CO2 for EOR is not going to help.
That's not what they said.  They actually said that the gas will migrate and exit through a producer (well).  As HO said after the producer wells are shut down if there is a caprock on the field you've got centuries at least.  The fact that the gas can migrate thru the whole field is a good thing, it means most of the void space of the field is available for CO2 storage.
TJ - however is this guaranteed sequestration?  It is not really no good if the CO2 just starts bubbling up after a few centuries.