Carbon capture
2008 March 12
The Economist has an item on this, and how it might represent an opportunity for re-use of depleted oil and gas fields.
Recycling through new use on a mammoth scale.
Could this be the case as well in NZ, or does our geology prevent this?


I’m a bit sceptical of this whole concept as a solution, at one atmosphere pressure one cubic metre of coal makes about a thousand cubic metres of CO2, is the CO2 going to be seperated from the N2 that is also in the power stations exhaust? If not that five thousand cubic metres of gas (at STP) to store. Now obviously that needs to be compressed to stick it into old oil wells, but this takes energy, and quite a lot of energy to compress it to the 100+ atmospheres needed to get it under a thousand or more metres of ocean and rock.
Also, with oil wells it is normal to inject water or air to keep fissures in the oil field open and to push the oil out, so these old wells aren’t empty spaces underground, to get the CO2 in, something else has to come out, that something likely being very oily water.
Still, I’m not a geologist – but neither is Sir Nicholas Stern.