2012 project data from the first in situ controlled sub-seabed CO2 release facility in Ardmucknish Bay, Oban, where 4.2 tonnes of CO2 was injected. This scoping study explores the viability and scientific goals for a follow-on marine impact project related to carbon capture and storage.
Use Cases
- Analyze data from the 2012 CO2 injection to assess transport of leaks via shallow sediments in the marine environment.
- Evaluate ecosystem effect monitoring data from the Ardmucknish Bay facility for CCS risk assessment.
- Scope scientific goals for a follow-on project using knowledge from the initial 4.2-tonne CO2 release.
Strengths
- Based on the world's first marine in situ controlled sub-seabed CO2 release facility.
- Involved a specific injection of 4.2 tonnes of CO2 for study.
- Project aims to deliver useful knowledge at the start of the UK CCS commercialisation program.
Limitations
- Dataset scope is a scoping study, not primary experimental data.
- Specific data columns, rows, and file formats are unknown.
- Focus is on project viability and goals, limiting direct analytical applications.
Provenance
- Source
- British Geological Survey (BGS)
- Collection Method
- Scoping project exploring viability and scientific goals for a follow-on marine impact project.
- Time Range
- 2012 (initial CO2 injection)
- Freshness
- null
- Geography
- Ardmucknish Bay, Oban, United Kingdom