Webinar | Carbon Capture and Storage Project Development
Carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCS, CCUS) technologies are currently being commercialized worldwide. The skills needed and the technologies employed are much like those we are familiar with from oil and gas (O&G) production field development. Very much like O&G field development, the development of a CCS or CCUS project must proceed in a carefully structured manner to ensure that it meets all safety, economic, and environmental objectives. Further, recent experience shows that the implementation of a CCS or CCUS project has unique features, principally around post combustion CO2 capture and around reservoir management during and post injection.
This presentation details the gate requirements to final investment decision from initial stakeholder needs identification through regulator concerns, addressing surface and sub-surface risk mitigation, the EPC timeline, as well as the development of reservoir monitoring, measurement, and validation during and post CO2 injection.
Brought to you by the Fort McMurray Branch. Everyone is welcome to attend.
For any questions about this event, please contact [email protected].
Dave Moffatt, P.Eng., has 45 years experience in project management, technical (geological and reservoir engineering) commercial, regulatory, and business development in a wide range of energy projects and businesses in the upstream and midstream sectors of the natural gas industry and related energy projects such as underground natural gas storage (Canada and USA), carbon capture and storage (CCS), acid gas injection and geothermal. Dave has experience with CCS projects in deep saline aquifers, depleted gas pools and de-watering projects in Canada and France. His experience includes project initiation, site selection, concept studies, managing multi-disciplinary teams evaluating technical feasibility, field programs, project development planning, risk assessment, MMV, regulatory applications and successful government grant funding applications.
Dave co-authored “The Fort Nelson Carbon Capture and Storage Project – A Program for Large-Scale Geologic Storage of CO2 from a Natural Gas-Processing Plant in British Columbia, Canada”.