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The 11th Society of Petroleum Engineers Comparative Solution Project: Summary Report

Abstract

The 11th Society of Petroleum Engineers Comparative Solution Project benchmarked simulation tools for geological CO2 storage. A total of 45 groups from leading research institutions and industry across the globe signed up to participate, with 18 ultimately contributing valid results. This talk summarizes the SPE11. A comprehensive introduction and qualitative discussion of the submitted data are provided, together with an overview of online resources for accessing the full depth of data. A global metric for analyzing the relative distance between submissions is proposed and used to conduct a quantitative analysis of the submissions. This analysis attempts to statistically resolve the key aspects influencing the variability between submissions. The study shows that the major qualitative variation between the submitted results is related to thermal effects, dissolution-driven convective mixing, and resolution of facies discontinuities. Moreover, a strong dependence on grid resolution is observed across all three versions of the SPE11. However, our quantitative analysis suggests that the observed variations are predominantly influenced by factors not documented in the technical responses provided by the participants. We therefore identify that unreported variations due to human choices within the process of setting up, conducting, and reporting on the simulations underlying each SPE11 submission are at least as impactful as the computational choices reported.

Category

Conference lecture

Language

Other

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Digital / Mathematics and Cybernetics
  • University of Stuttgart
  • University of Bergen
  • NORCE Research AS
  • Stanford University

Presented at

SIAM Conference on Mathematical & Computational Issues in the Geosciences (GS25)

Place

Baton Rouge

Date

14.10.2025 - 17.10.2025

Organizer

Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics

Year

2025

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository