Nettsider med emneord «CO2 storage»
Tøyen Park was alive with activity for all ages. Activities ranged from building a life size dinosaur from artificial dinosaur bones, demonstrating rock faults using a sponge cake, to blowing up balloons using bicarbonate of soda mixed with vinegar to produce CO2.
Storage of CO2 in safe geological formations in the subsurface can be an important strategy to reduce CO2 gasses in the atmosphere.
SSC - RAMORE is a research project about leakages of CO2 stored in the subsurface.
Main objectives of the project: To establish technology for risk assessment, monitoring, and remediation of CO2 stored in the subsurface.
- CO2 mixed with formation water does not geochemically alter the seals to such an extent that they leak, summarizes Professor of Geology Per Aagaard, and adds: Although these promising results of the SSC-Ramore project, we still do need more knowledge of the process involved in the sealing caprock above the CO2 reservoir to be certain that the sealing is tight and CO2 stays in place. Now our research focus has somewhat shifted towards how the geomechanical properties change with diagenetic processes (cementation) and structural deformation processes.