IFP
OGST - Revue d'IFP Energies nouvelles
Open Access
Issue Oil & Gas Science and Technology - Rev. IFP
Volume 60, Number 1, January-February 2005
Dossier: IFP International Workshop "Gas-Water-Rock Interactions Induced by Reservoir Exploitation, CO2 Sequestration, and other Geological Storage"
Page(s) 9 - 18
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.2516/ogst:2005002

Oil & Gas Science and Technology - Rev. IFP, Vol. 60 (2005), No. 1, pp. 9-18
DOI: 10.2516/ogst:2005002

Gas-Water-Rock Interactions Induced by Reservoir Exploitation, CO2 Sequestration, and Other Geological Storage

Interactions gaz-eau-roche induites par l'exploitation des réservoirs, le piégeage géologique


É. Brosse1, O. Bildstein2 and R. Swennen3

1  Institut français du pétrole
2  Commissariat à l'Énergie Atomique
3  Afdeling Fysico-chemische Geologie


Abstract
At the opening of the Millenium the planet Earth is confronted with a major open question, namely: what will be the result in the nearby future of the soaring interference between human activities and natural environmental processes? There is an increasing sense of alarm about the anthropogenic threats that exert pressure on the environment, especially if projected towards the future with the growing adoption of the standards of leaving that prevail in developed countries. Modern economies, born from the Industrial Revolution, have developed on the basis of the largely available and relatively inexpensive energy provided by fossil fuels, which are easy to produce, to transport, to store and to use in concentrated power units. In the so-called rich countries basic equipment, energy production means, industrial facilities, lifestyle expectations were shaped by this position with respect to energy, and fastly developing countries today reproduce the same attitude. But for the first time in human history the rising population, the escalating consumption of energy, water, food and raw materials, the increasing production of substances and goods but also of pollutants and wastes, and the expanding demand for mobility and transportation collide with the physical capacities of the planet's resources.



© IFP 2005