The maturing carbon market is a major driver for deployment of carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) projects. Both the subsurface technical knowledge and related data sets of the petroleum industry are major inputs required for the world to successfully move towards a carbon-neutral and sustainable energy future. CCUS has experienced growing interest over the past two decades, due to the desire to reduce CO₂ emissions and to make industrial sources more environmentally sustainable. More recently, policy instruments such as the expanded Section 45Q federal tax credits - up to $35 per tonne for EOR and $50 for geologic storage - and carbon credit mechanisms such as California’s Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) are providing opportunities that offset deployment costs and can result in CCUS being a potentially profitable enterprise.
Plan now to attend Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS) 3–5 March 2025 at the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston, Texas. This in-person event unites AAPG, SPE, and SEG to highlight current CCUS work and address related challenges, including:
- Subsurface Geologic Storage, Site Selection, Monitoring, Modeling, and Risk Assessment
- Infrastructure and Well Design
- EOR, Injection, and Utilization
- Financial, Economics, and Regulatory Framework
- ESGs and Stakeholder Engagement
- ML and Data Analytics Applications
- Case Studies
Exciting keynote speakers and lunch panels will drive the discussions of the future of energy. Technical speakers will represent research institutions, universities, and industry. The work presented at the event will demonstrate the ongoing need for skilled petroleum geologists, geophysicists, and engineers to help define the future of carbon management.
Where do Energy Professionals come into play?
The technology and methodologies developed by the oil and gas industry are directly applicable in characterizing storage formations, caprocks, reservoir model development, monitoring, well design, and ensuring the safe construction of injection sites. Energy Professionals are uniquely suited to evaluate candidate storage formations and EOR fields for CCUS programs.
How does this benefit the petroleum industry?
Given the world’s reliance on fossil-fuels for the next several decades, CCUS offers a path to sustainable development within the petroleum industry and a means to meet increasingly stiff emission regulations. The near-term use of CO₂ for EOR also helps maximize production from currently stranded oil reserves, thus reducing the environmental footprint relative to field development. Finally, the petroleum industry is uniquely qualified to deploy large-scale geological storage commercially, while creating an additional revenue stream. Therefore, CCUS offers the potential for new career pathways for early- to late-career professions, including geologists and engineers.