Abstract
Methane leakage caused by well integrity failure was assessed at 28 abandoned gas wells and 1 oil well in the Netherlands, which have been plugged, cut and buried to below the ground surface (≥3 mbgl). At each location, methane concentrations were thoroughly scanned at the surface. A static chamber setup was used to measure methane flow rates from the surface as well as from 1 m deep holes drilled using a hand auger. An anomalously high flow rate from 1 m depth combined with isotopic confirmation of a thermogenic origin revealed ongoing leakage at 1 of the 29 wells (3.4%), that had gone undetected by surficial measurements. Gas fluxes at the other sites were due to shallow production of biogenic methane. Detailed investigation at the leaking well (MON-02), consisting of 28 flux measurements conducted in a 2 × 2 m grid from holes drilled to 1 and 2 m depth, showed that flux magnitude was spatially heterogeneous and consistently larger at 2 m depth compared to 1 m. Isotopic evidence revealed oxidation accounted for roughly 25% of the decrease in flux towards the surface. The estimated total flux from the well (443 g CH4 hr−1) was calculated by extrapolation of the individual flow rate measurements at 2 m depth and should be considered an indicative value as the validity of the estimate using our approach requires confirmation by modelling and/or experimental studies. Together, our findings show that total methane emissions from leaking gas wells in the Netherlands are likely negligible compared to other sources of anthropogenic methane emissions (e.g.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 773-782 |
| Number of pages | 10 |
| Journal | Science of the Total Environment |
| Volume | 659 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Apr 2019 |
Keywords
- Abandoned wells
- Gas migration
- Methane isotopes
- Methane leakage
- Static chamber measurements
- Well integrity
- drill
- methane
- oil
- air pollution
- article
- concentration (parameter)
- experimental study
- flow rate
- gas
- gas field
- Netherlands
- oil field
- priority journal
- thermogenesis