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Featured researches published by Malcolm J. Arnot.


The APPEA Journal | 2012

Multi-scale characterisation of the Paaratte Formation, Otway Basin, for CO2 injection and storage

Mark Bunch; Ric Daniel; Mark J. Lawrence; Greg Browne; Saju Menacherry; Tess Dance; Malcolm J. Arnot

Bunch, Mark; Lawrence, Mark; Dance, Tess; Daniel, Ric; Menacherry, Saju; Browne, Greg; Arnot, Malcolm


International Conference and Exhibition, Melbourne, Australia 13-16 September 2015 | 2015

Feasibility of Storing Carbon Dioxide on a Tectonically Active Margin: New Zealand

Brad Field; Mark J. Lawrence; A. Nicol; David D. McNamara; Malcolm J. Arnot; Fiona Coyle; Karen E. Higgs; Bruce Mountain; Matt Gerstenberger; Ric Daniel; Mark Bunch; Barry Barton

Screening of New Zealands sedimentary basins indicates several gigatonnes of carbon dioxide storage capacity might be available. However, carbon dioxide storage is currently untested in New Zealand, and it is likely that most theoretical storage capacity will be discounted once detailed assessments are made. New Zealands position on an active Neogene plate boundary raises additional key factors that will affect final site selection. Issues specific to New Zealands setting include: 1. rapid facies changes, syndeposition and post-depositional structural events, particularly in regions close to the plate boundary; 2. rapid subsidence and high sedimentation rates leading to overpressured reservoirs and strong water drive in some structures, which will potentially result in injectivity issues, particularly in depleted fields; 3. mineralogically immature reservoir rocks requiring assessment of injected gas-rock reactions; 4. common occurrence of faults of various scales, requiring assessments of their sealing capacity and present stress fields; and 5. distinguishing induced seismicity from common natural seismicity. Some of these risk factors will also influence the relationship between social acceptance and the design of regulations. Despite the risks, hydrocarbon-producing fields in Taranaki indicate that viable reservoir-seal pairs are likely to be present. Additionally, injection of small volumes of produced water and significant natural gas storage at the depleted Ahuroa Field have not led to noticeable induced seismicity, though large volumes expected from a carbon dioxide injection project would likely require careful site assessment for seismic risk in some areas. Natural analogue and laboratory fluid-rock experiments are investigating the effects of carbon dioxide injection on reservoir mineralogy, and some effects can now be anticipated. Currently produced gas from New Zealand locally contains significant carbon dioxide (up to 44% carbon dioxide in the Taranaki region and up to 30% in the Canterbury Basin) and if new discoveries also have a high carbon dioxide content, they may require processing before use, with disposal of carbon dioxide. Such a large gas discovery anywhere in New Zealand could, therefore, stimulate rapid deployment of CCS. It is highly likely viable storage sites exist, particularly away from the current plate boundary, though the site-specific nature of site assessment is particularly important in New Zealands geological context.


Marine and Petroleum Geology | 2010

Reservoir potential of Late Cretaceous terrestrial to shallow marine sandstones, Taranaki Basin, New Zealand

K.E. Higgs; Malcolm J. Arnot; Greg H. Browne; E.M. Kennedy


SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition | 2010

Integrated Workflow for Modeling Basin-Scale Petroleum Systems: Applications to the Kupe Area, Taranaki, New Zealand

Lucia Roncaglia; Malcolm J. Arnot; Jan Baur; Miko Fohrmann; Peter R. King; Karsten F. Kroeger; Brad Ilg; Dominic P. Strogen; Hai Zhu; Michael Milner


Marine and Petroleum Geology | 2016

Outcrop characterization of a submarine channel-lobe complex: The Lower Mount Messenger Formation, Taranaki Basin, New Zealand

Larisa U. Masalimova; Donald R. Lowe; Glenn R. Sharman; Peter R. King; Malcolm J. Arnot


SPWLA 56th Annual Logging Symposium | 2015

Core Plug Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Analysis as a Method to Estimate Permeability Anisotropy

Evan R. McCarney; Patrick N. Butler; Sam Taylor-Offord; Malcolm J. Arnot; Mark W. Hunter; Mark J. Lawrence


Archive | 2015

Re-Assessment of Maturity and Charge in Southern Taranaki Basin (New Zealand) Using Integrated 3D Basin Modelling

Karsten F. Kroeger; Rob Funnell; Malcolm J. Arnot; Suzanne Bull; Matt G. Hill; T. R. Sahoo; Hai Zhu


International Conference and Exhibition, Melbourne, Australia 13-16 September 2015 | 2015

A Regional Model for New Zealand's Taranaki Basin: The 4-D Taranaki Project

Suzanne Bull; Matt G. Hill; Malcolm J. Arnot; Hannu Seebeck; Cathal Reilly; Hai Zhu; Karsten F. Kroeger


International Conference and Exhibition, Melbourne, Australia 13-16 September 2015 | 2015

Reassessment of Exploration Risks in Taranaki Basin Related to Gondwana Margin Evolution and Establishment of an Active Plate Boundary in New Zealand Using Integrative 3-D Basin Modelling

Karsten F. Kroeger; Rob Funnell; Malcolm J. Arnot; Suzanne Bull; Matt G. Hill; Hai Zhu


International Conference and Exhibition, Melbourne, Australia 13-16 September 2015 | 2015

A New Generation of Digital Maps Showing Potential Petroleum Habitats in New Zealand's Offshore North-Western Province (Reinga-Northland-Taranaki Basins)

Malcolm J. Arnot; Hannu Seebeck; Mark J. Lawrence; Andrew Boyes; Dominic P. Strogen; Kyle J. Bland; Matt G. Hill; Peter R. King

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A. Nicol

University of Canterbury

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