Welcome to the CLIMIT PhD Seminar 2016

Venue: Scandic Hotel at Date: 20-21 October 2016

The CLIMIT PhD Seminar will be an excellent meeting place for young researchers where you can learn more about CO2 capture and storage (CCS).

The seminar is also a very good opportunity to get a broad overview of the latest achievements within CCS.

This year's seminar is arranged jointly by the CLIMIT Programme and the SUCCESS research centre.

The programme and practical information is given on the following pages. We hope you will enjoy the seminar!

Aage Stangeland The Research Council of

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About the PhD Seminar

The CLIMIT PhD Seminar 2016 takes place in Hamar 20-21 October.

The seminar will, as previous years, focus on presentations from ongoing PhD projects within CCS. In addition, the seminar includes a field trip to study the local geology of the area, which among other features presents the best CO2 storage analogues in Norway.

Hamar is located 125 km North of and can easily be reached by trains from Oslo or Gardermoen airport.

The PhD seminar takes place at Scandic Ringsaker Hotel close to Hamar: The seminar is one of several interesting events:

 19 October: The traditional SUCCESS Fall seminar with presentations of results from the SUCCESS research center.

 20 October: Field trip to study geology relevant for CO2 storage. The field trip will be an excellent opportunity to learn

more about CO2 storage. For young researchers working on CO2 capture and transport it will be a perfect introduction to what

CO2 storage is all about. For young researchers with expertise

within CO2 storage the field trip will give valuable insight into real life geology.

 21 October: The CLIMIT PhD seminar with key note lectures and presentations from ongoing PhD projects. This will be a perfect opportunity to learn from other young scientists working on CCS and to establish valuable networks.

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Programme

Thursday 20 October 2016

09.00 Introduction to Field trip Venue: The Scandic Ringsaker Hotel, Hamar. Presentations by:  Johan Petter Nystuen: The Brumunddal sandstone - an introduction  Per Aagaard: The Brumunddal aquifer - a CCS pilot?  Elin Skurtveit: Deformation structures and reservoir properties

11.00 Lunch

11.45 Bus departure to the field site (The Brummundal sandstone) Please note: Late October may be wet and windy, and even snowy. Good footwear (e.g. mountain boots) and appropriate clothing will be necessary. Planned stops (depending on weather) - Stop 1: Turnoff to Brumunddal. Overview of Bjørgeberget and the halfgraben. - Stop 2: Narud waterworks. Local water supply that obtains it water from the sandstone. - Stop 3: Quarry near Mauset school. - Stop 4 (depending on the waterflow): river near Mauset farm. Section through sandstone. Aeolian sandstone. - Stop 5: Lerdal at Dalseng. Highly fractured sandstone. - If time permits, stop at Gimse - dissolution in limestone (sinkholes).

16.30 Buss departure from field site and back to the hotel

19.00 Mingling and dinner Venue: The Scandic Ringsaker Hotel, Hamar.

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Friday 21. October

Venue: The Scandic Ringsaker Hotel.

08.00 Welcome Aage Stangeland, The Research Council of Norway

08.05 CO2 Storage - Key Note lecture Kari-Lise Rørvik, Senior Adviser at Gassnova will give a Key Note presentation on - how CO2 storage work; - how it can help solving the global warming challenge; - and the conclusion from feasibility studies on how Norway could build large scale CCS projects

08.35 Key finding from the SUCCESS center Key note presentation from Maria Elenius, UNI Research

09.00 CO2 capture at Technology Center Mongstad (TCM)

Validation of a dynamic process model of the post-combustion CO2 capture amine plant at TCM Rubén Mocholí Montañés, PhD student, NTNU

09.20 Emulsions that make CO2 storage more efficient

Water-carbon dioxide emulsions for improved CO2 sequestration and enhanced oil recovery in depleted carbonate reservoirs Juri Selvåg, PhD student, University of

09.40 The importance of physical properties when storing CO2 Investigation of Petrophysical and Acoustic Properties of SW Barents Sea Cap Rock Sequences Mohammad Nooraiepour, PhD student, University of Oslo

10.00 Seismic data and it's important for understanding CO2 storage Laboratory measured seismic dispersion in shales – effect of water content. Dawid Szewczyk, PhD student, NTNU

10.20 Injecting CO2 into the underground

How different is the direct-injection and the injection-post-depletion CO2 storage from geomechanical point of view? Sohrab Gheibi, PhD student, NTNU

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10.40 CO2 Storage Modeling Why conventional simulators fail, and what we can do about it Odd Andersen, PhD student, University of Bergen and SINTEF

11.00 Lunch

12.10 Accurate monitoring techniques are needed to understand the fate of injected CO2 Effect of CO2 on P- and S-wave properties at seismic and ultrasonic frequencies Nicolaine Agofack, PhD student, NTNU

12.30 Corrosion in CO2 transport pipeline

Formation of corrosive phases in dense phase CO2 Bjørn Helge Morland, PhD student, Institute for Energy Technology (IFE)

12.50 CO2 storage combined with Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) CO2 Foam EOR Field Pilot in a Mature Oil Field: Pilot Design, Geologic and Reservoir Modeling, Laboratory Investigations, and Application of a Reservoir Management Workflow Zachary P. Alcorn, PhD student, University of Bergen

13.10 Power production and CO2 capture from Hydrogen combustion Boundary layer flashback in premixed hydrogen-air flames with acoustic excitation Vera Hoferichter, PhD student, BIGCCS And Technical University of Munich

14.30 Group discussion The audience will be divided in groups of four to six. The following questions will be discussed:

1. What can we do to ensure that our research leads to real cut in global CO2 emissions? 2. There are only a few large scale CCS plants worldwide. What can we do to ensure wide implementation of CCS globally?

15.15 Awards for best presentation and best poster

15.30 Departure from the hotel

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Practical information

Date and meeting venue The CLIMIT PhD seminar 2016 is arranged 20-21 October 2016 at the Scandic Ringsaker hotel, Kårtorpvegen 1, 2320 Furnes. The hotel is located outside Hamar, 125 km North of Oslo. There are frequently trains going from Oslo and the Gardermoen airport to Hamar. From the Hamer train station you can reach the Scandic Ringsaker Hotel by taxi.

Who is invited to the PhD Seminar?

PhD students and Post Doc candidates working on CCS projects are invited to the seminar. Supervisors, project leaders, and representatives from industry are also welcome.

Cost There is no conference fee. Hotel and travel cost:  The Research Council of Norway will cover hotel cost provided that you stay at the Scandic Ringsaker Hotel and register through our registration system, see link at previous page.  Hotel and travel cost are only covered for PhD students.  Travel cost will be refunded by the Research Council of Norway for PhD students. Travel refund is restricted to travel within Norway.  Hotel and travel cost are only covered for PhD students working in a project financed by CLIMIT, FME BIGCCS or FME SUCCESS. Hotel and travel cost will not be covered for others (Post Doc, PhD candidates not working in CLIMIT or FME projects, supervisors, project leaders, etc.)  Hotel room for maximum two nights can be covered.  The following traveling costs are eligible for refunding: cheapest possible flight tickets and cheapest possible travel to and from airport and meeting venue.  Everybody must book their own flight tickets.  There will be pre-booked taxies from Hamar train station to the Scandic Ringsaker Hotel. Everybody must send an e-mail to [email protected] with their arrival time at Hamar train station so that we can book taxies accordingly.  Travel cost will only be refunded if you send us a travel form after the seminar. Please note that we only accept original receipts and signed travel forms sent by post to the Research Council of Norway in attention Siri Ovstein no later than 1st November 2016.

Posters All participants are encouraged to bring a poster presenting their project!

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Awards There will be awards for best presentation and best poster!

The field trip to the Brumunddal Sandstone The Brumunddal sandstone covers an area comparable with a medium sized oil reservoir / aquifer in the North Sea and has been discussed as an onshore test site for carbon storage. At this field excursion we will visit several locations that will show how the sandstone was formed at a time when the lake Mjøsa area was a desert. The sandstone is preserved in a halfgraben within the Oslo rift. We will also see tracks of deformation bands. This easily recognizable yellow and red sandstone still has much of its original porosity, making it a usable reservoir. Today it is an important groundwater magazine, serving drinking water to more than 4,300 nearby households.

Organizing committee The seminar is Co-organized by the CLIMIT secretariat and FME SUCCESS. Questions can be addressed to the organizing committee: o Aage Stangeland, The Research Council of Norway, [email protected], phone +47 22 03 73 70. o Tor Langeland, CMR, [email protected]

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About the CLIMIT Programme CLIMIT is the Norwegian RD&D programme for accelerating the commercialization of CCS by financial stimulation of research, development and demonstration. The program includes CCS in fossil fuel-based power generation and industrial point source emissions.

The programme is managed by Gassnova in cooperation with the Research Council of Norway. Read more at www.climit.no .

About SUCCESS

The SUCCESS centre addresses several important areas for CO2 storage in the subsurface: storage performance, sealing properties, injection, monitoring and consequences for the marine environment. The “CO2-School” is in addition a major educational program.

The centre will as far as possible try to bridge gaps from details to concepts and applications, from small to large scale, and to transfer data and knowledge between many related fields.

The main objective of the SUCCESS centre is to provide a sound scientific base for CO2 injection, storage and monitoring, to fill in gaps in our strategic knowledge, and provide a system for learning and development of new expertise.

More information available at http://www.fme-success.no/

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