Frontier science and challenges on offshore carbon storage

Haochu KU, Yihe MIAO, Yaozu WANG, Xi CHEN, Xuancan ZHU, Hailong LU, Jia LI, Lijun YU

Research output: Journal PublicationsReview articleOther Review

8 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology is an imperative, strategic, and constitutive method to considerably reduce anthropogenic CO2 emissions and alleviate climate change issues. The ocean is the largest active carbon bank and an essential energy source on the Earth’s surface. Compared to oceanic nature-based carbon dioxide removal (CDR), carbon capture from point sources with ocean storage is more appropriate for solving short-term climate change problems. This review focuses on the recent state-of-the-art developments in offshore carbon storage. It first discusses the current status and development prospects of CCS, associated with the challenges and uncertainties of oceanic nature-based CDR. The second section outlines the mechanisms, sites, advantages, and ecologic hazards of direct offshore CO2 injection. The third section emphasizes the mechanisms, schemes, influencing factors, and recovery efficiency of ocean-based CO2-CH4 replacement and CO2-enhanced oil recovery are reviewed. In addition, this review discusses the economic aspects of offshore CCS and the preponderance of offshore CCS hubs. Finally, the upsides, limitations, and prospects for further investigation of offshore CO2 storage are presented. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].
Original languageEnglish
Article number80
JournalFrontiers of Environmental Science and Engineering
Volume17
Issue number7
Early online date26 Jan 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2023
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

We would like to express our gratitude for the financial support from the Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality (No. 21DZ1206200) and the Shanghai Agriculture Science and Technology Program (No. 2022-02-08-00-12-F01176). Zhu and Li would also like to thank the financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos. 52006135 and 72140008), respectively.

Keywords

  • CCS hubs
  • CO2 transport
  • CO2-CH4 replacement
  • CO2-EOR
  • Direct CO2 injection
  • Offshore carbon storage

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