BGR Bundesanstalt für Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe

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Base scenario and CO2 emitters

In this work package following aspects were investigated:

  • definition of a base scenario (regional cluster of CO2 emitters, transport settings, characteristics of storage reservoir),
  • definition of typical CO2 stream compositions of different emitters in regional cluster,
  • description and accounting of CO2 production of different emitters,
  • set-up of a geological model for a fictive storage site in the base scenario.

Base scenario: All work in the project was based on a scenario of a regional cluster of eleven CO2 emitters (power stations and industrial plants) whose CO2 streams contain different impurities. In the scenario, captured CO2 streams of individual emitters are collected in a regional pipeline network, jointly transported and injected into a geological storage reservoir. Parameters of the scenario are fictive, referring to real settings in and features of Germany. Considered emitters comprise seven fossil-fuelled power stations (fueled by hard coal, lignite or natural gas) equipped with post-combustion or pre-combustion capture or employing the oxyfuel technology. In addition, four industrial plants (one steel mill, two cement plants and one refinery) are part of the cluster. The spatial array of the different emitters is schematically depicted in the figure on the right. In the scenario, the joint CO2 streams of the cluster (19.35 Mio t CO2 annually) are transported in a 400 km long trunk line (300 km onshore and 100 km offshore) to the injection site. A generic saline aquifer (Buntsandstein, depth of 1600 m) in the North Sea area is chosen for injection and geological storage.



Cement plant in Brevik, NorwegenA cement plant – a CO2 emitter to be considered for CCS (here: in Brevik, Norway) Source: BGR

Emitters: The CO2 production by the individual emitters, in particular the complex carbon flow of industrial plants, was accounted and modelled in detail. The average CO2 stream composition and the temporal variation of the CO2 mass flow rates of the different emitters were used to define the starting point for considering potential impacts of variable CO2 mass flow rates and CO2 stream compositions on the consecutive steps of the CCS process chain.

In addition, a measurement concept was developed for reliable, accurate and cost-effective accounting/quantification of the CO2 production of the individual emitters. This allows deducing the respective proportionate usage of the joint CO2 transport and storage infrastructure by each individual emitter.

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