EXAMINATION OF THE QUEENSTON FORMATION IN CENTRAL NEW YORK FOR GEOLOGIC CARBON DIOXIDE STORAGE POTENTIAL
The available data sets reveal six stacked petrophysical zones (Queenston A (top) to F (base)). Well log and core data indicate that zones B and C are laterally continuous throughout the study area and have the highest porosity and permeability values within the formation, but seismic data suggest there are internal unconformities within these zones. Well core implies that zones B and C represent a series of baselevel changes. Zones B and C are both thickest in NW-SE trending “channels” in the study area. For wells with neutron porosity and gamma logs, maps of net sandstone thickness with >10% porosity were constructed for zones B and C, and areas with high net porous sandstone thickness coincide with the depocenter ‘channels.’
A static CO2 storage calculation can be made for a specific AES power plant in Tompkins County, New York, where data are relatively abundant. Seismic, core, and well log data suggest that in a 5 mile x 5 mile area surrounding this AES power plant, the Queenston Formation can sequester approximately 52 million metric tons of CO2 (~22 years of CO2 production.) Further permeability studies, particularly fracture permeability, must be performed in order to gain insight on Queenston Formation fluid migration paths, and the uncertainty in the environmental interpretation plays a large factor in our confidence of pore volume interconnectivity available for sequestration.