TY - JOUR
T1 - Regional screening of saline aquifers in the Malay Basin for CO2 storage
AU - de Jonge-Anderson, Iain
AU - Ramachandran, Hariharan
AU - Widyanita, Ana
AU - Busch, Andreas
AU - Doster, Florian
AU - Nicholson, Uisdean
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s)
PY - 2025/3/11
Y1 - 2025/3/11
N2 - The Malay Basin has received significant attention for geological carbon dioxide storage (GCS), but there are no published studies addressing the selection of appropriate deep saline aquifers. This study closes this gap. We process spatial data and use geological modelling and cluster analysis to identify optimal areas for GCS, considering various subsurface characteristics such as temperature, pressure, porosity and thermophysical CO2 properties. It is found that the basin contains numerous Cenozoic aquifers suitable for GCS including locally thick, but low net-to-gross (NTG), stacked formations. Pliocene aquifers are too shallow to offer storage for CO2 in large quantities, but upper Miocene aquifers located in the northwest of the basin contain promising intervals with significant porosities and conditions favouring denser CO2. Middle Miocene aquifers, while low NTG, are thick, and optimally located around the margins of the basin. They also have significant storage capacity and could be developed as a stacked GCS site. Lower Miocene aquifers are higher NTG, but deeply buried across many areas of the basin, yet the oldest aquifer evaluated still holds substantial storage capacity, where subject to minor burial at the margins of the basin. Overall, this study provides a novel first assessment of aquifer GCS potential in the Malay Basin, while also contributing to wider efforts to evolve screening workflows for other geological basins.
AB - The Malay Basin has received significant attention for geological carbon dioxide storage (GCS), but there are no published studies addressing the selection of appropriate deep saline aquifers. This study closes this gap. We process spatial data and use geological modelling and cluster analysis to identify optimal areas for GCS, considering various subsurface characteristics such as temperature, pressure, porosity and thermophysical CO2 properties. It is found that the basin contains numerous Cenozoic aquifers suitable for GCS including locally thick, but low net-to-gross (NTG), stacked formations. Pliocene aquifers are too shallow to offer storage for CO2 in large quantities, but upper Miocene aquifers located in the northwest of the basin contain promising intervals with significant porosities and conditions favouring denser CO2. Middle Miocene aquifers, while low NTG, are thick, and optimally located around the margins of the basin. They also have significant storage capacity and could be developed as a stacked GCS site. Lower Miocene aquifers are higher NTG, but deeply buried across many areas of the basin, yet the oldest aquifer evaluated still holds substantial storage capacity, where subject to minor burial at the margins of the basin. Overall, this study provides a novel first assessment of aquifer GCS potential in the Malay Basin, while also contributing to wider efforts to evolve screening workflows for other geological basins.
KW - Carbon dioxide storage
KW - CCS
KW - Site screening
KW - Malay Basin
KW - Malaysia
KW - CO2 storage
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=86000583522&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijggc.2025.104347
DO - 10.1016/j.ijggc.2025.104347
M3 - Article
SN - 1750-5836
VL - 143
JO - International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control
JF - International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control
M1 - 104347
ER -