The Netherlands sector of the Southern North Sea provides case studies of shallow gas accumulations and their relationship with faulting. The data consists of a poster presented at the UKCCSRC biannual meeting in Cardiff on September 10-11th, 2014, describing work from the 'Fault seal controls on CO2 storage capacity in aquifers' project funded by the UKCCS Research Centre. The British Geological Survey (BGS) is listed as the organization.
Use Cases
- Identify fault attributes associated with fluid leakage based on the study of shallow gas accumulations.
- Model conditions for safe CO2 storage site selection based on evidence of fault-leak relationships.
- Compare biogenic and thermogenic gas sources in the North Sea region for subsurface risk assessment.
Strengths
- Focuses on a specific, high-relevance topic for carbon capture and storage (CCS) safety.
- Originates from a named research project (UKCCSRC-C1-14) and a recognized organization (British Geological Survey).
Limitations
- The primary data format is a poster; underlying tabular or geospatial data is not directly accessible.
- Description metadata is limited; actual data quality requires manual inspection after download.
- Row count and column-level documentation are absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
Provenance
- Source
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Collection Method
- Research presented in a poster at the UKCCSRC biannual meeting.
- Time Range
- Research presented in 2014.
- Freshness
- Last updated 2026-04 09 08:25:27.906020; freshness should be verified.
- Geography
- Netherlands sector of the Southern North Sea.