STEMM-CCS is an ambitious research and innovation project on geological carbon dioxide (CO2) storage that will deliver
new insights, guidelines for best practice, and tools for all phases of the CO2 storage cycle at ocean Carbon Capture and
Storage (CCS) sites. It brings together the main operator (Shell) of the world’s first commercial scale full-chain ocean
demonstration CCS project (Peterhead Project) with the leading scientific and academic researchers in the field of ocean
CCS. The work performed in STEMM-CCS will add value to this existing operational programme, and fill gaps in future
capability by providing generically applicable definitive guides, technologies and techniques informing how to select a site for
CCS operations, how to undertake a risk assessment, how best to monitor the operations, how to provide information on
fluxes and quantification of any leakage; necessary for the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) and to guide
mitigation/remediation actions. All of this information will be used to better communicate the case for offshore CCS, with a
particular focus on communities directly and indirectly impacted. During STEMM-CCS we will perform a simulated CO2 leak
beneath the surface sediments at the site to be used for CCS as part of the Peterhead project. This experiment will be used
to test CO2 leak detection, leak quantification, impact assessment, and mitigation/remediation decision support techniques
currently at the Technology Readiness Level (TRL) stage 4-5 and support their development to a higher TRL. In addition,
using new geophysical approaches STEMM-CCS will develop tools to assess leakage from natural geological features (e.g.
chimneys) and engineered structures such as abandoned wells. The Peterhead project will commence during the life of
STEMM-CCS and so a unique aspect is the focus on a real-world ocean CCS site covering its initial phases of
implementation, with direct involvement of industrial partners.