4.7 Article

Evaluation of Potential for Salt Cavern Gas Storage and Integration of Brine Extraction: Cavern Utilization, Yangtze River Delta Region

Journal

NATURAL RESOURCES RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 5, Pages 3275-3290

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11053-020-09640-4

Keywords

Yangtze River delta; Salt cavern UGS; Feasibility evaluation; Existing salt caverns; Brine extraction and cavern utilization

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51604144, 41672292, 51834003, 51574048, 51874273, 51774266]
  2. Chongqing Basic Research and Frontier Exploration Project [cstc2018jcyjAX0441]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2018CDQYZH0018]
  4. State Key Laboratory of Coal Mine Disasters Dynamics and Control [2011A105287-RC201901]
  5. [19cqu2018CDHB1B09]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The Yangtze River delta region of China consumes a large amount of natural gas, but the current gas storage facilities of this region can provide only 19.6 x 10(8) m(3) of natural gas for use, which will be far less than the required gas storage volume of 66.8 x 10(8) m(3) in 2030. The reason is due to lacking suitable underground gas storage space. To meet the space demands of underground gas storage (UGS) in the Yangtze River Delta region, the feasibilities of UGS construction in salt formations including depth of mines, thickness of salt strata, distance to pipelines, and geologic safety of the salt mines are evaluated. The representative blocks of Huai'an salt mine and Fengxian salt mine are suggested as potential sites for UGS construction. To promote UGS construction operation quickly and economically, utilizing the existing caverns can be considered firstly. The evaluation indicates that the existing caverns can store about 12.91 x 10(8) m(3) natural gas for UGS with a cavern utilization rate of 30%. To satisfy the space for residual gas storage, the idea of integration of brine extraction and cavern utilization is put forward; that is, salt mining enterprises carefully control the usability of newly increased cavern volume during brine extraction. The forecast shows that about 36.9% of the newly increased cavern volume is sufficient to meet the residual cavern demand of UGS to fulfill a gas store volume of 34.3 x 10(8) m(3) in 2030 in the Yangtze River delta. This research provides an effective method to solve the space need for UGS in the Yangtze River delta; simultaneously, it also presents win-win cooperation for the utilization of abandoned caverns and energy storage.

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