Joule II Project Study on Underground Carbon Dioxide Disposal
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Description
A European Commission study initiated in 1993 examined the potential for underground disposal of industrial carbon dioxide emissions. The two-year Joule II project involved research organizations from the UK, Netherlands, France, Norway, and Germany. The objective was to assess the safety, economics, and environmental impact of storing CO2 from large point sources like power stations.
Use Cases
Analyze project findings on geological storage feasibility for carbon dioxide emissions from large point sources.
Review participant contributions from organizations like the British Geological Survey and Statoil to understand collaborative research scope.
Examine the study's methodology for assessing safety and economic criteria for underground CO2 disposal.
Strengths
Study was part of the European Commission's Joule II Non-nuclear Energy Research Programme.
Involved eight participant organizations from five European countries.
Research focused on a specific two-year period initiated in January 1993.
Limitations
Dataset structure is unknown; no column names, sample data, or row count are provided.
Content appears to be a project paper or report, limiting direct analytical use for typical ML tasks.
Temporal coverage is limited to the study period, with no indication of updated data.
Provenance
Source
British Geological Survey (BGS)
Collection Method
Commissioned research study as part of the Joule II Non-nuclear Energy Research Programme.
Time Range
Study initiated in 1993, spanning two years.
Freshness
null
Geography
Europe, with participant organizations from the UK, Netherlands, France, Norway, and Germany.
Data appears to be a project paper or report; users should expect textual content rather than structured tabular data for analysis.