- EWRE
-   
    EWRE – Environmental & Water
		Resources Engineering Ltd.Person in charge: Dr. Jacob Bensabat  Profile:
 
 EWRE is a consulting R&D oriented company based in Haifa, Israel. It has
		been established in 1992 and since then has been operating continuously.
		Provides services in Water Resources management, pollution control, risk
		assessment, environmental remediation planning and execution (including
		LNAPL and DNAPL pollution), seawater intrusion, transport phenomena in
		porous media, water related problems in civil engineering (tunneling,
		construction of deep structures etc.). Since 2009, EWRE operates also the field
		of CO2 storage (partner of EU–FP7 MUSTANG and coordinator of EU–FP7
		PANACEA).
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 Solution of flow and transport problems, density dependent flow and transport
		and implementation to large scale regional problems, energy storage in
		aquifers, risk assessment, design and implementation of Decision support
		systems, hydro–informatics, heat and mass transfer. Coupled processes,
		establishment of large environmental databases, software development,
		including modules for the development of Decision Support systems. Planning
		and design of hydro–geological and environmental field work.
 EWRE is involved in many projects in Israel, working for ministries
		(Infrastructure, Environment Protection, Energy and Science), public
		companies (NTA – the subway company of Tel–Aviv, the planning department
		of the Israel Electric Company, the Israel Railways Corporation, Oil storage and
		distribution companies) and private companies. In Europe, EWRE operates
		through bilateral cooperation with companies in Greece, EU funded projects
		(FP5 project Chrystechsalin and FP6 project GABARDINE), FP7–MUSTANG, FP7–
		PANACEA (coordinator) and projects on Integrated water resources
		management (IWRM) funded by the German ministry of Science, BMBF
		(Marsaba – Phase I and II, SMART – phase I and phase II).
 Contribution:
 
 EWRE will undertake the coordination of the project and contribute to many of
		the work–packages. More specifically, design, planning and coordination of the
		field activities at Heletz, Large scale modeling, injection strategies, Risk
		management, dissemination (responsible for the preparation of the project
		website, see www.panacea–co2.org for example).
 Key Personnel:
 
 Jacob Bensabat: 
		Ph.D., computational modelling and DSS design, Water resources
		management and pollution control. Ph.D. 1986, From the Technion Israel Institute of
		Technology, Post–doc, MIT, 1988–1990. Since then worked on many R&D projects,
		including, heat and mass transfer processes in soils, storage of energy in deep
		formations and disposal of hazardous waste in deep geological formations. Lately he
		has been associated to a feasibility study on the production of saline water from deep
		geological formations for desalination in areas that are distant from the sea.
 Sagi Dror: B.Sc. Electrical engineering and in Architecture from the
		Technion – IIT. Expert programmer of user interfaces and pre and post
		processing software.
 Chen Shapira: B.Sc. Physics, parallel computations, already 
		active in PANACEA.
 Myra Kitron–Belinkov: PH.D. Applied
		mathematics.
 Rebecca Angel: Project management.
 
- UU
-      
  
    UU – Uppsala UniversityPerson in charge: 
    Professor Auli Niemi 
     Profile:
 
 Department of Earth Sciences
		Department of Earth Sciences comprises research from geology and geophysics to
		hydrology http://www.geo.uu.se
		, being one of the largest Earth Sciences
		Departments in Scandinavia. Geological storage of CO2 is a major overlapping research
		areas of the department, comprising activities from the different disciplines, e.g.
		receiving ‘excellence research´ funding from the National Research Council. The project
		will be mainly placed within the Program of Air, Water and Landscape Sciences (LUVAL)
		and partly, for the part of seismic monitoring, within the program of Geophysics. The
		contact person was previously head of the LUVAL program, but resigned in order to
		coordinate the ongoing large scale integrating EU FP7 project MUSTANG
		(www.co2mustang.eu) for CO2 geological storage 
		in saline formations (2009–2013).
 The external funding to Earth Sciences Programs comes e.g. from National Research
		Councils (VR, FORMAS), EU (CO2SINK, MUSTANG, PANACEA, CO2CARE etc), national
		sector foundations as well as from private sector. The facilities and equipment comprise
		a hydrological laboratory, chemistry laboratory, laboratory facilities to observe CO2
		behavior (two–phase flow, dissolution etc) in heterogeneous in analogue systems,
		significant geophysical instrumentation (including 60 permanent seismological stations,
		a 312 channel reflection seismic instrument (408UL), about 15 portable 3comp
		seismometers and a number of electromagnetic instruments., a computer network, and
		extensive modeling software. Most significantly, the group is in collaboration with EWRE
		(another partner in this proposal) installing major monitoring equipment into the deep
		injection/monitoring wells of the Heletz experiment, which equipment is owned by UU.
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 Subsurface hydrology, groundwater modeling, site characterization, multiphase flow,
		coupled processes, geophysics, seismic monitoring, heterogeneity and up–scaling,
		probabilistic modeling, coupled processes investigation of deep disposal of liquid waste,
		including CO2. Thermo–hydro–mechanical coupling of CO2 storage as well as natural
		analogue studies. Deep involvement in CO2 storage work, e.g. coordination of
		MUSTANG (www.co2mustang.eu).
 Contribution:
 
 The group will be responsible
		(i) parts of modeling and model development (Includign WP
		leader), in particular the multiphase–multicomponent, coupled
		processes and upscaling aspects and (ii) development of
		improved seismic monitoring. As coordinator of MUSTANG the
	    partner will be important link to this project
 Key Personnel:
 
 Prof. Auli
		Niemi is Professor in Groundwater Modeling and
		is heading the geohydrology research at UU, Dept Earth
		Sciences. Over 25 yrs of experience on various aspects
		of geohydrology, including multiphase modeling, upcaling,
		site characterization. Coordinator of MUSTANG (EU FP7 program
		for CO2 geological storage) including major role in designing
		the Heletz CO2 injection experiment, together with EWRE.
		Scientific visibility e.g.: Convening major CO2 sessions 
		in EGU, 2011 and 2012; Member of EASAC working group on CCS; 
		Member of the editorial board of IJGHG etc.; 
		Main responsible of the UU work in this project.
 Prof. Christofer Juhlin is Professor in 
		Geophysics at Uppsala and adjunct professor at Curtin University 
		of Technology. Experience from many large projects, including 
		the Swedish Deep Gas Drilling Project, nuclear waste storage,
		various Europrobe projects, and number of international CO2 projects such as
		CO2SINK, CO2CARE and MUSTANG. Head of the SwedSTORECO2 project.
 Prof Chin–Fu Tsang (Senior Staff
		Scientist emeritus, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,
		visiting professor at Uppsala) is one of the foremost experts in 
		the world in the field of
		modeling of coupled processes and fractured media. Extensive experience in THMC
		processes, high-level experience on several aspects of CO2 storage including 
		the far field impacts and pressure plume. Relevant visibility e.g. by co-chairing 
		intnl. workshop in CO2 storage (CO2SC 2006) held in Berkeley, USA. Will 
		participate in supervisory role to pressure plume/far field impacts studies and 
		hydromechanical (coupling) studies.
 Dr. Fritjof Fagerlund is an Assistant
		Professor with experience in particular in multi–phase
		modeling, and his position is especially directed towards
		CO2 storage. Major experience in modeling the CO2 geological
		storage in particular as part of the design simulations
		of the Heletz injection experiment.
 Dr. Prabhakar Sharma is an Assistant
		Professor with emphasis in experimental hydrology. He
		will give support to hydrological data analysis from Heletz.
 In addition, there area number of PhD. students and PostDocs actively working
		with CO2 geological storage research and will contribute
		with their participation and support to this project.
 We will hire a new PostDoc on geohydroloigcal work and one 
		on geophysical work to participate to this 
		project.
 More detailed descriptions of the group and the persons can
		be found here (geohydrology) and 
		here (seismic 
		geophysics)
 
- IIT
-  
  Technion – Israel Institute of TechnologyPerson in charge: Professor Jacob Bear  Profile:
 
 Technion – Israel Institute of Technology is a 
    public research university in Haifa, Israel. Founded in 1912, Technion 
    is the oldest university in Israel. The university offers degrees in 
    science and engineering, and related fields such as architecture, 
    medicine, industrial management and education
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 Relevant to this projects are
					its experts in the departments of Civil and Environmental
					Engineering/division of hydrodynamics and water resources,
					and the department of Mechanical engineering. Specifically,
					these departments include experts in:
 (1) Modelling phenomena
					of transport in porous media;
 (2) Hydrology and hydraulics
					of groundwater;
 (3) Management of water resources
 (4) Chemical engineering
 (5) Hydrodynamics and thermodynamics.
 (6) Geo–Mechanics.
 (7) Energy systems (information systems engineering).
 Contribution:
 
 Leading the activities in WP5.
    research leading to identification of all relevant flow,
    reactive transport, thermodynamic and geo–mechanic processes,
    analyzing them and eventually incorporating them in a comprehensive
    flow and transport model that will be used for analyzing
    CO2 sequestration in geological formations.
 Key Personnel:
 
 Jacob Bear 
  Professor (Emeritus) of Hydrology, Hydrogeology in the Dept. of Civil
					and Environmental Engineering, at the Technion – Israel Institute.
					Of technology, Israel. His research and publication activities
					are covering the areas of: Hydrology of groundwater; Modelling
					flow and contaminant transport in aquifers; Management of
					water resources systems, especially aquifers; Phenomena of
					transport in porous media; Focus on the development of numerical
					tools (double continuum model); The quantification of flow
					processes in the fractured–porous fractured unsaturated zone
					as well as the characterisation of the aquifer geometries
					and hydraulic parameters. Further expertise in the area of
					water resources assessment in arid and semi–arid areas, infiltration
					processes in unsaturated fractured systems and the characterisation
					of geothermal reservoirs with tracer experiments.
 
- UGOE
-  
 UGOE – University of Göttingen,
		  Geoscience Center (GZG)Person in charge: Prof. Dr. Martin Sauter  Profile:
 
 The Chair of Applied Geology at the 
Geosciences Centre in Göttingen was established
in 2002 with a special focus on the hydrogeology of fractured aquifers and is now
recognized to be a renowned institution in this field. Today it comprises
approximately 45 personnel including two professors, 5 faculty and staff members,
13 post doctorate students, 19 Ph.D. students and 15 M.Sc. 
students, 
(http://www.uni-goettingen.de/en/8483.html). 
Research and teaching at the Chair of
Applied Geology is divided into seven groundwater orientated thematic groups placing
an emphasis on subsurface investigation and characterization, modelling, exploitation
of geothermal energy, hydro-geochemistry, risk assessment and remediation of
contamination as a result of industrial activities
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 1) Long-term expertise in the characterization of fractured porous groundwater systems.
 2) Subsurface investigation al laboratory scale, column experiments.
 3) Subsurface investigation at field scale using hydraulic, tracer testing and borehole 
geophysical methods at large depths (4–5000 m).
 4) Hydro-geochemistry, analytical techniques.
 5) Numerical modelling of flow and reactive transport.
 Contribution:
 
 pscaling the experiment results to industrial 
				scale; Development of KIS-Tracers; Modelling of CO2 storage processes in the 
				subsurface; Risk-assessment.
 Key Personnel:
 
 Martin Sauter: 
Professor
of Applied Geology at the GZG; focus on the development of
numerical tools (double continuum model), quantification
of flow processes in fractured–porous fractured unsaturated zone 
as well as the characterisation of the aquifer geometries and hydraulic 
parameters. Further expertise in the area of water resources assessment 
in arid and semi-arid areas, infiltration processes in unsaturated fractured 
systems and the characterisation of geothermal reservoirs with tracer 
experiments.
 Tobias Licha: M.Sc. (1998) on Chemistry and Analytical Chemistry and Hydrogeology
at the University College London, Ph.D. (2002) on „Short chained alkylphenols in
groundwater- Chemical analysis, Adsorption Mechanism and Field Cases“. Currently
head of the hydrochemical laboratories at GZG. Main research is on transport
behavior of soluble organics, reactive tracers and instrumental organic analysis.
 Thomas Ptak: Prof. Dr.-Ing. Thomas Ptak leads the groundwater research group at
the Department of Applied Geology in Göttingen. He received his Diploma in civil
engineering from the University of Karlsruhe, the Ph.D. degree from the University of
Stuttgart. His work mainly focuses on the development of subsurface investigation
methods, multilevel groundwater sampling technology, measuring equipment,
quantification of natural attenuation processes, and numerical stochastic transport
modelling techniques, which are based on geostatistical approaches.
 Tatomir, Alexandru: Dr. A. Tatomir is a PostDoc in the Applied Geology Department
at University of Göttingen. Ph.D. (2012) at the University of Stuttgart developing
conceptual and numerical models for multiphase flow in fractured porous media. Main
research interests are on up-scaling, flow and transport in heterogeneous porous
media, code development, designing and modeling of tracer tests.
 
- CSIC
-   
   CSIC – National Research Council of SpainPerson in charge: Jesus Carrera Ramirez  Profile:
 
 Spanish national network of research institutes. 
The team participating in MUSTANG comprises two groups: Hydrogeology (GHS with an associate unit 
at the Technical University of Catalonia, UPC – 6 professors and 20 investigators) and Environmental 
Geochemistry (GQA – 3 senior researchers and some 10 doctoral and post–doctoral assistants). It 
combines experience on Groundwater and Geochemistry, including the characterization of permeable 
media by means of hydraulic, hydro–chemical and environmental isotope data, solids and aqueous 
solutions and the quantitative assessment of water–rock interactions, with special emphasis on low 
permeability fractured media. Development of numerical modelling techniques and other part work in 
data acquisition both in the field (down–hole logging and monitoring equipment) and in the lab 
(access to XRD, TEM, AFM, etc). The group has a long record of collaboration on both publicly and 
privately funded projects, including more than 15 EU projects.
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 Code development: Single and Multiphase flow coupled to soil deformation under
nonisothermal conditions, Reactive transport, parameter estimation. Modelling;
nonisothermal single and multiphase flow, reactive transport processes for soil
decontamination, multi-component gaseous transport in fractured media. Field Testing;
Hydraulic and tracer testing in saturated and non saturated media and monitoring of
hydraulic and reactive transport for low permeability fractured media. Laboratory testing;
single and multiphase “flow–through” experiments, tests for reactive processes.
Characterization; hydraulic parameters (retention and relative permeability), solid
characterization (DFX, SEM, AFM,…), water samples extraction by squeezing and dilution.
Currently working on several mayor Spanish (CIUDEN) and EU (MUSTANG. PANACEA)
projects on CO2 geological storage.
 Contribution:
 
 Processes, Modelling, Integration
 Resources:
 
 Laboratory for experiments on fluid-rock interactions, fluid and solid analyses, access to
supercomputing facilities for numerical modelling, access to Hontomin field data.
 Key Personnel
 
 Jesus Carrera: Ph.D. Univ. Arizona (1984). Professor at UPC until 2006, vice
-president for research of the university (1994-1998). Leads a research group in groundwater
hydrology of about 30 people that has developed 6 codes to model flow, transport,
conjunctive management of surface and groundwater, network design, multiphase nonisothermal
flow and reactive transport. These been applied to a wide set of problems.
Coauthored more than 300 publications, including more than 70 in international refereed
journals.
 Jordi Cama: Ph.D. Geology, University of Barcelona, Spain (1998); 
Researcher at IDAEA,
laboratory measurement of mineral dissolution kinetics, CO2-brine-rock interactions,
passive treatment of contaminated waters, natural attenuation proceses.
 Josep M. Soler: Professor, geologist (Ph.D. 1997 Yale University); 
Reactive transport
modelling applied to weathering and bauxite formation, effect of hyperalkaline solutions on
rocks hosting repositories for radioactive waste, diffusion and sorption in clay formations,
coupled transport phenomena.
 Marco Dentz: Doctor of Natural Sciences, Rupertus Carola University of 
Heidelberg, 2000;
Stochastic processes, Transport theory, Up-scaling, Non-linear dynamics, Flow and
transport in heterogeneous formations, Subsurface hydrology.
 
 Collaborators from UPC:
 Maarten W. Saaltink: Ph.D. UPC, Spain (1999); Interpretation of pumping and tracer
tests in fractured media, development of finite element reactive transport model codes,
numerical and computational behaviour of solution methods for reactive transport model
codes, numerical modelling of reactive transport.
 Tobias S. Rötting: Ph.D. UPC, Spain (2007); Researcher at UPC, 
Passive remediation of
acid mine drainage and other waters with high metal concentrations, CO2-brine-rock
interactions, Reactive transport modelling, Geostatistical inverse modelling of groundwater
flow, Multilevel groundwater sampling techniques, Sustainable water management,
Science-policy interactions.
 
- CNRS
- 
     CNRS– Géosciences Montpellier
 Person in charge: Philippe Pezard  Profile:
 
 Géosciences Montpellier (CNRS): 70 scientists with expertise from geochemistry to
hydrology, 40 engineers and technicians, and 50 postdoc and
PhD students. Scientific approaches including field measurements,
laboratory experiments and quantitative modelling of (hydro)geologic
processes. Ongoing projects include: (i) quantifying heterogeneities
at all scales, (ii) determining temporal changes in hydrologic
systems and the application of this knowledge to the remediation
of pollution; (iii) diffusion and transport in sedimentary
rocks; (iv) experimental and modelling studies of dissolution
and precipitation during CO2 injection into geologic systems
in cooperation with several industrial programs and the French
National Research Agency and (v) borehole hydrogeophysical
monitoring systems. Geosciences was ranked in 2010 at the
highest level (A+) by the national evaluation commission
(AERES).
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 Coordinator of numerous
					fundamental and applied research programs, including recently
					the ALIANCE European project, the group has partnerships
					with a variety of technologic partners including the CEA
					(the French Nuclear Research Agency), IRSN (the French Institute
					for radioactivity protection, TOTAL and SMEs. Its
 experimental know-how and analytical expertise make it one
				  of the leading
 laboratories in the coupling of fluid-rock interaction with
				  fluid flow and
 hydrodynamics. The team is also strongly involved in three
				  other projects at European scale, focusing on geothermal energy
				  (HiTI) and CCS (CARBFIX, MUSTANG and PANACEA). CNRS is also developing
				  monitoring and downhole geophysical and hydro-geological tools.
				  At laboratory scale, CNRS has developed percolation benches
				  for specific application to underground CO2 storage (the  ICARE
				  LAB. Platform).
 Contribution:
 
 Laboratory experiments for developing remediation fluids. Monitoring
				strategy and monitoring data analysis (surface and downhole). Field
				applications (RTS monitoring and remediation experiment at Heletz).
				Training. Coordination of WP03 & WP06.
 Resources:
 
 High-tech laboratory equipment
					for performing percolation experiments up to 200°C – 20MPa
					and petrophysic analyses. Fluid and rock analysis (ICPMS-HR/Laser,
					ICP-AES, BEM, EBSD, Raman,XRD, AFM, …). Micro-tomograhy
					data analysis platform. CFD and flow-transport-reactions
					simulation tools and parallel computing resources.
 Workbench
					for development/test/calibration of borehole logging and
					monitoring equipment. Experimental site for low depth CO2
					injection (monitoring tool testing).
 Key Personnel
 
 Philippe Pezard: Ph.D from Columbia U., New York, (1990) and Head
						Research Scientist at CNRS. Former president of the French research group
						for the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP; 2000 - 2003). Main
						research topics are petrophysical properties of rocks, geophysics, fluid flow
						and stress field analyses in the subsurface and monitoring devices
						development. Co-author of more than 100 publications, including 72 in
						international refereed journals.
 Philippe Gouze: Ph.D in quantitative hydrology (1993) from the U. of Paris
						UPMC under the direction of G. de Marsily. Full time researcher CNRS from
						1995. Head of the Transport in Porous Media group (29 peoples) part of the
						Geosciences research unit. His research works focus on groundwater and
						reservoirs modelling with emphasis on reactive transport and experimental
						characterization of flow, transport and reactions from laboratory scale to
						field scale. He co-authored more than 70 publications, including more than
						45 in international refereed journals.
 
- IMAGEAU
- 
  IMAGEAU –instrumentation du sous-sol
 Person in charge: Laurent DEPRAZ  Profile:
 
 Created in 2008, IMAGEAU is a
					start-up company specialized in the domain of subsurface
					instrumentation, particularly based on geophysical and hydrological
					methods. It is an SME with 10 employees, with individuals
					exceeding individually 20 years of experience in the domains
					of geophysics, downhole geophysical and hydrological methods,
					instrumentation and permanent observatories.
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 IMAGEAU is the exclusive owner
					of a patent (N° 06 09965 in France, with pending extension
					at European scale) dedicated to subsurface instrumentation
					from boreholes with hydrogeophysical methods. The project
					head engineer has experience in the domain of geophysical
					instrumentation and software development for the past 20
					years. The head scientist for IMAGEAU, electrical engineer
					and PhD, has over 25 years of experience in Earth sciences
					and, particularly, borehole geophysics, environmental applications
					and instrumentation. Coordinator the ALIANCE European project
					(FP5), he has been a participant to the FP6 “HITI” project
					coordinated by ISOR (Iceland) and is a now a participant
					to the FP7 “MUSTANG” project coordinated by ISOR (Iceland).
					IMAGEAU field experimental knowledge and analytical expertise
					makes it one of the leading SME in downhole geophysical instrumentation.
					IMAGEAU has partnerships and contracts with a number of French
					and European research bodies (CNRS, BRGM, SINTEF, Environmental
					Ministry of Baleares), and international companies (Schlumberger,
					TOTAL, VEOLIA, SOLVAY, Bureau Veritas).
 Contribution:
 
 Design, construction and field
					deployment of the “RTSG” (resistivity/ temperature/ strain/
					gas) downhole electrical resistivity observatory equipped
					with fiber optical sensors in the context of the geophysical
					monitoring experiment at the Maguelone site (Languedoc, France).
 Resources:
 
 Logging tools and associated
					equipments (truck, winch, cable, …) for field deployment
					and calibration of downhole observatories.
 Key Personnel
 
 Denis NEYENS: Head
					engineer - Instrument design & construction
 Simon BARRY: Field geophysical engineer
 Jean-Philippe BELLOT: Hydrogeologist
 Philippe PEZARD: Head scientist
 Laurent DEPRAZ: Project manager
 
- UCAM
- 
  UCAM
 Person in charge: Herbert Huppert  Profile:
 
 1989- Professor of Theoretical Geophysics and Foundation Director of the Institute of
					Theoretical Geophysics, University of Cambridge.
 FRS since 1987.
 Fellow of American Geophysical Union and American Physical Society.
 2006-2011 Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award.
 2011 Bakerian Prize Lecture of the Royal Society on ‘Carbon storage: caught between a
					rock and climate change.
 Author or co-author of approximately 230 scientific research papers discussing applied
					mathematics, crystal growth, fluid mechanics, geology, geophysics, oceanography,
					meteorology and science in general, with a total of over 8000 citations and an h index of
					49.
 BSc (Hons, Sydney)    MA (Cantab)    Ph.D. (California)
 MS (California)    MSc (Australian National)    Sc.D. (Cantab)
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 Huppert’s research has been in many areas of quantitative fluid mechanics. His
					approach can be categorised as building nonlinear mathematical models, which require
					analytical, approximate or numerical solution, and comparing the results with specially
					designed laboratory experiments. He then extrapolates these new concepts to describe
					quantitatively large-scale natural events and industrial situations. Some five years ago
					he started working on carbon dioxide storage, presenting one of the first models to
					determine how far the storage pool, trapped by an impermeable cap rock, would extend
					with time. He then developed the initial models to calculate leakage times and
					dissolution rates. He is the author or co-author of over 235 papers, which have been
					published mainly in leading international journals devoted to aspects of fluid mechanics
					and applied mathematics.
 Contribution:
 
 Will conduct numerical and analytical investigations in broad areas relevant to carbon
					dioxide storage, confirmed by simple desk-top experiments. Will investigate and bring
					order to data from large-scale field experiments around the world.
 Resources:
 
 DAMTP has one of the best laboratories worldwide specialising in the investigation of
					small-scale fluid-dynamical systems. There are three permanent technicians employed
					in the laboratory, in addition to two part-timers. There is a considerable amount of
					experimental equipment, and more can be made in the attached machine shop, which
					has allowed many investigations of different types to be undertaken. The lab is under
					the directorship of Dr Stuart Dalziel, who is aided in this task by Prof. Paul Linden FRS,
					the recently appointed G. I. Taylor Professor, who has extensive experience over a
					whole range of environmental problems.
 Key Personnel
 
 Herbert Huppert
 Jerome Neufeld
 Neufeld is a recently appointed lecturer at the University of Cambridge. His appointment
					is equally split between the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics,
					the BP Institute and the Department of Earth Sciences. He has performed innovative
					work on the melting of the base of an ice sheet due to an adjacent shear current, the
					solidification of binary alloys and recently on carbon dioxide sequestrations. He has
					been intimately involved in the investigations and resulting scientific papers on effects of
					leakage and dissolution. He has developed general models of the microstructure of
					crystalline arrays and how they are influenced by flows both internally and externally.
 
- VIBROMETRIC
- 
 VIBROMETRIC Oy COSMA
 Person in charge: Calin Cosma  Profile:
 
 Vibrometric Oy is a consulting, R & D company specialised in geophysical studies for
					engineering, mining and environment. The company offers integrated contractual and
					/ or consulting services, based on a range of hardware and software tools of
					proprietary design, the results from sustained R & D activity over two decades. In
					particular, Vibrometric has provided notable contributions to the development of
					small scale and deep seismic imaging methods and techniques. Since 1986, The
					company is based in Helsinki, Finland since 1986 (www.vibrometric.com).
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 Areas of expertise and fields of application include: site characterisation (prediction of
					weak zones and faults, rock quality assessment); mining (ore prospecting and
					delineation, mapping of ore bodies and seams); oil (fractured reservoir
					characterisation, 3D fracture mapping from VSP data) tunnels (prediction of rock
					anomalies ahead of works) & location of old shafts, drifts, caverns; nuclear and
					hydroelectric power plants (foundation and underground facilities); ground
					engineering & control of man-made structures; dams and dam sites (detection of
					leakage, mapping of karsts, checking of grout injection, etc.); bridges (detection of
					fissures, sand pockets and unconsolidated concrete); chemical and radioactive waste
					and chemicals, water resources, environmental contamination); storage for oil, gas,
					hot water
 Contribution:
 
 Vibrometric Oy is a consulting, R & D company specialised in geophysical studies for
					engineering, mining and environment. The company offers integrated contractual and
					/ or consulting services, based on a range of hardware and software tools of
					proprietary design, the results from sustained R & D activity over two decades. In
					particular, Vibrometric has provided notable contributions to the development of
					small scale and deep seismic imaging methods and techniques. Since 1986, The
					company is based in Helsinki, Finland since 1986 (www.vibrometric.com).
 Resources:
 
 A wide range of hardware and software
					tools for seismic investigations. These are of
					proprietary design, resulted from a sustained R&D activity of more than two decades.
 Key Personnel
 
 Calin Cosma, 
					president of Vibrometric Oy, has a broad international background in
					the development of specialised geophysical tools and geophysical surveying. He holds
					a PhD in physics. He has worked on several large projects, including the national and
					international programs for nuclear waste storage characterisation, various mining
					projects, and recently, the CO2SINK and MUSTANG EU funded projects for CO2
					storage characterisation.
 Nicoleta Enescu, Ph.D., specialized is signal processing and interpretation focused
					on seismic imaging from surface and boreholes. She has worked on several large
					projects, including the CO2SINK and MUSTANG EU funded projects for CO2 storage
					characterisation.
 
- IMPCOL
- 
  IMPCOL - Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine
 Person in charge: Robert W. Zimmerman  Profile:
 
 Imperial College is generally ranked among the top twenty universities in the world,
					and the top five in Europe (according to Times Higher Education, 2011: 9th in world,
					3rd in Europe). The Department of Earth Science and Engineering at Imperial College
					is a world leader in modelling mechanical, hydrological and chemical processes
					occurring in the subsurface. The department has 45 full-time permanent academic
					staff, 57 post-doctoral researchers, 148 PhD students, and includes two member of
					the UK Royal Academy of Engineering. The group involved in the TRUST proposal has
					a long record of collaboration on both publicly and privately funded projects,
					including five EU projects, and numerous projects funded by major oil and mining
					companies.
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 The Imperial College team has extensive experience in both analytical and numerical
					modelling of subsurface geomechanical processes. Of particular relevance to the
					present project is the development of a proprietary two- and three-dimensional
					geomechanics simulation tool, in the form of an object-oriented finite element-based
					library for fracture propagation. The library is fully integrated into the CSMP++ multiphysics
					modelling Application Programming Interface, developed jointly with ETH
					Zurich.
 Contribution:
 
 Numerical modelling of geomechanical processes.
 Resources:
 
 Extensive in-house computer software for hydrogeomechanical process modelling,
				   access to supercomputing facilities for numerical modelling.
 Key Personnel
 
 Robert Zimmerman: B.S., Columbia University, 1977; M.S., Columbia University,
					1979; Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley, 1984. He has been a lecturer at UC
					Berkeley, a staff scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and Head of
					the Division of Engineering Geology and Geophysics at the Royal Institute of
					Technology (KTH) in Stockholm. Since 2008 he has been Professor of Rock
					mechanics at Imperial College. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal
					of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences, and is on the Editorial Boards of Transport in
					Porous Media and the International Journal of Engineering Science. He is the author
					of the monograph Compressibility of Sandstones (Elsevier, 1991), and co-author,
					with JC Jaeger and NGW Cook, of Fundamentals of Rock Mechanics (4th ed., Wiley-
					Blackwell, 2007). He conducts research on the hydromechanical behaviour of
					fractured and porous rocks, petrophysics, fluid flow in porous media, rock failure and
					fracture, and on the relationship between microstructure and the physical properties
					of heterogeneous materials, with applications to petroleum engineering, underground
					mining, radioactive waste disposal, and subsurface carbon sequestration. He is the
					author of over 80 articles in refereed scientific journals.
 Dr. Adriana Paluszny: M.S. in Computer Science, Simón Bolívar University, Caracas,
					2003; Ph.D., Imperial College, 2008. Dr. Paluszny has over two years of industrial
					experience as a scientific developer. Since 2009 she has been a research associate at
					Imperial College, developing new methods to model fracture and fragmentation in
					rock masses using object-oriented C++. She conducts research in modelling of
					fracture growth, generation of topological and geometrically realistic fracture
					patterns, flow in fractured porous media, and fragmentation, in the context of
					petroleum engineering and mining. Her core expertise includes numerical methods,
					computational geometry, scientific visualization, object-oriented software
					development, and applied mathematics. She is an active reviewer for over a dozen
					different specialized journals and conferences, and has published a number of papers
					in high-ranked journals.
 
- ETH
- 
  ETH - The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich 
 Person in charge: Ralf Brauchler  Profile:
 
 Founded in 1855, ETH Zurich today offers researchers an inspiring environment and
					students a comprehensive education as one of the leading international universities
					for technology and the natural sciences. ETH Zurich has more than 16,000 students
					from approximately 80 countries, 3,500 of whom are doctoral candidates. More than
					400 professors teach and conduct research in the areas of engineering, architecture,
					mathematics, natural sciences, system-oriented sciences, and management and
					social sciences. ETH Zurich regularly appears at the top of international rankings as
					one of the best universities in the world. 21 Nobel Laureates have studied, taught or
					conducted research at ETH Zurich, underlining the excellent reputation of the
					institute. Transferring its knowledge to the private sector and society at large is one
					of ETH Zurich’s primary concerns. It has succeeded in this, as borne out by the 80
					new patent applications each year and the 215 spin-off companies that were created
					out of the institute between 1996 and 2010. ETH Zurich orients its research strategy
					around global challenges such as climate change, world food supply and human
					health issues.
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 Integration of flow, transport and geophysical data: Development of hydraulic and
					hydrogeophysical tomographic inverse schemes that are based on transformation of
					the diffusivity and transport equation into the eikonal equation as well as optimization
					procedures based on geostatistics. Development of analytical solutions for heat
					transport taking into account different boundary conditions. Performance of a large
					variety of hydrogeological and geophysical field and laboratory testing: multi-level,
					multi-well hydraulic and tracer testing, geophysical well bore logging, seismic
					tomographic measurements, pneumatic flow and transport measurements at
					fractured low permeability laboratory samples.
 Contribution:
 
 Inverse modelling, high resolution parameter estimation
 Resources:
 
 Access to a suite of numerical solvers (eikonal, diffusivity and solute transport) and
					access to supercomputing facilities for numerical modeling.
 Key Personnel
 
 strong>Ralf Brauchler: Ph.D. Univ. Tübingen (2005). Dr. Ralf Brauchler has been a Senior
					Research Associate in the engineering geology group since September 2010. His
					main research covers many aspects of hydrogeological site investigation with special
					focus on high resolution tomographic methods. He develops hydrogeological and
					hydro-geophysical inversion schemes to understand solute and heat transport
					processes in the subsurface. Therefore, Ralf Brauchler performs hydraulic, tracer
					tests and geophysical field measurements in unconsolidated and fractured aquifers.
					Beyond this, he has a broad experience in flow and transport on the laboratory scale
					in low permeable fractured geological materials.
 Peter Bayer: Ph.D. Univ, Tübingen (2004); has been a Senior Research Associate in
					the engineering geology group since January 2009. His work is dedicated to
					groundwater, with the main focus set on characterization and simulation of
					hydrogeological and geothermal systems. He is also active in in operations research
					so as to integrate environmental model development and methods of applied
					optimization, geostatistics and probability theory. In 2007-2009 he worked on water
					related environmental assessment methods as Marie Curie Fellow at the Ecological
					Systems Design group at the ETH. Peter Bayer also served as consultant for the
					United Nations IAEA, was in the Editorial Board of the Hydrogeology Journal and of
					the MDPI Journal Sustainability.
 
- KLOE SA
- 
  KLOE SA
 Person in charge: Paul Coudray  Profile:
 
 Kloe was founded in 2000 for the development of new solutions in Optics and
					Photonics. The Dilase technology developed by Kloe provides a high flexibility for the
					development of new optical functions and products, which placed on the market a
					new range of passive optical sensors for a wide range of applications, such as
					temperature sensors (K-FBG), gas sensors (K-BGS) or strain sensors (K-STR).
 These sensors, either based on optical fiber or optical integrated circuits technologies,
					are associated to a hardware interrogator : K-FBG / K-BGS and K-STR Monitoring
					Units, with high data refreshment rates in order to provide quasi real time readings.
					THe sensors are also associated to a GUI (Graphical User-friendly Interface) software
					which, in particular, is suitable for direct readings, localisation and quantification of
					any event observed along a sensing cable.
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 The K-FBG technology (temperature) developed by Kloé offers the unique ability to
					implement a very large number of precisely localized sensors along a same optical
					sensing cable, and to monitor several of these cables with a single hardware system.
					These sensors are highly sensitive and can detect temperature changes smaller than
					0.5°C in a few seconds.
 The K-BGS technology (gas) developed by Kloé offers now the ability to detect very
					low concentrations of alcanes gases, in a passive manner.
 In parallel, this technology is being transfered to other strategical industrial gases
					such as CO, CO2, H2 and H2S.
 Over the past years, Kloé accumulated expertise and qualifications with the
					deployment of these technologies in domains such as Oil&Gas exploration and
					production, land drilling and the geothermal industry.
 Contribution:
 
 Optical Integration for a downhole temperature array based on the BGS technology
 Resources:
 
 R&D capabilities (clean room…), Field optical instruments and tools
 Key Personnel
 
 Paul Coudray: CEO of KLOE
 Nicolas Brillouet: CTO of KLOE and General Management of Optical Sensing Technologies
 Benjamin Rolland: Product Manager, Optical sensors/Optical Integrated Sensors & Fiber Sensors
 
- KIT
- 
  KIT
 Person in charge: Dr. Gabriele Wiegand  Profile:
 
 Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) is a higher education and research
					organisation with about 8,900 employees and 20,000 students. KIT was established
					on 01/10/2009 as merger of Universität Karlsruhe (founded in 1825) and the
					Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe GmbH (founded in 1956), member of the Helmholtz
					Association of German Research Centres. In the area of technology and the
					environment, KIT devotes its attention to research and development work in the
					interest of the public
 Its Institute of Catalysis Research and Technology (IKFT) in general contributes to
					energy and environment related topics such as the use of biomass for chemicals and
					fuels production, improved combustion and gasification processes at high pressures
					and temperatures, geochemistry, and CCS. The IKFT has a staff of approx. 100,
					working in the field of: 1) Inline monitoring for separation processes in supercritical
					CO2 (extraction, cleaning); 2) fundamental studies in the water - CO2 system at high
					pressures and temperatures for CCS and geothermal applications (e.g. phase
					equilibria, distribution coefficients, salt effects, mass transfer, interfacial phenomena
					including the influence of surfactants); 3) homogeneous catalysis in supercritical
					fluids and using CO2 as a C1 building block; 4) production of synthetic fuels via
					combined fast pyrolysis and entrained flow gasification; 5) biomass utilization for
					hydrogen production via hydrothermal gasification (with integrated CO2-separation
					ready for use or storage); 6) catalyst design and catalysis for polymerisation of
					expoxy resins for composite materials. Special attention in the R&D work is paid to
					the full development of processes from lab scale up to process design and
					demonstration. Therefore, a broad variety of lab scale, PDU and pilot scale equipment
					is in use, providing fundamental and process data, supported by modelling and
					process simulation.
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 Handling of CO2 at high pressures, also for CO2 injection for storage; Physicochemical
					characterization of (water + carbon dioxide) systems under pressures up to
					1000 bars and temperatures up to 200°C; Conceptual design, construction and
					operation of high pressure devices for phase behavior, mass transfer and interfacial
					phenomena, chemical reactions; Inline and online monitoring methods at high
					pressures and temperatures for water and CO2 phases, Measurement and modeling
					of results; Due to biomass and fossil feedstock utilization technologies long-term
					knowledge on CO2-mitigation problems.
 Contribution:
 
 Development of a CO2 handling method and strategies for high pressure
					injection for storage purposes; Elaboration of Risk Management for the
					TRUST Project.
 Resources:
 
 High pressure plants of IKFT (KIT) consisting of high pressure visual cells, different
					types of high pressure compression devices for CO2 and liquids (gas compressors,
					syringe and HPLC pumps), online monitoring systems for gas phase and liquid phase
					analysis, NIR inline monitoring device, analytical labs of IKFT.
 Key Personnel
 
 Dr. Gabriele Wiegand, Research Scientist and Certified Safety Officer according to
					German regulations, Management of WP07
 
- BV
- 
  BUREAU VERITAS - BV
 Person in charge: Pierre Besse  Profile:
 
 Coordination of R&D projects,
						including on CO2 storage (e.g. CO2FieldLab)
 Bureau Veritas is a global leader in
						conformity assessment services the areas of quality,
						health and safety, environment and social responsibility
						(QHSE). It includes eight global businesses providing
						a complete set of services, servicing 370,000 customers
						across a wide range of end markets: Inspection, testing,
						audit, certification, risk management, outsourcing, consulting
						and training services. Particularly, in the field of
						certification, Bureau Veritas has expertise in conformity
						assessment of industrial equipment and installations
						to regulatory or client specifications from feasibility
						stage to de-commissioning.
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 Certification, formal safety
					assessment, management of Research on safety assessment,
					including numerical modeling and instrumentation.
 Contribution:
 
 Risk analysis, certification,
					dissemination
 Resources:
 
 Experts from various relevant
					fields
 Key Personnel
 
 Eric Baudin: instrumentation,
					qualification protocols
 Mathieu Bertrane: risk analysis, certification
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- IEC
- 
 IEC - Israel Electric Corporation
 Person in charge: Giora meron  Profile:
 
 IEC is a large industry, producing and distributing the vast majority of the electricity
					in Israel. It is a state company, operates power plants the distribution network in
					Israel. It maintains a relatively large number R&D department, which focuses also on
					environmental problems in general and among them on CO2 issues. The main
					interest of IEC in the project is to be acquainted with CO2 storage as it may be the
					key client of the technology in Israel (all the IEC power plants are operated with fossil
					fuels such as gas and coal).
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 R&D in energy related problems.
 Contribution:
 
 Power supply for the operation of the injection at Heletz.
 Key Personnel
 
 Giora Meron, Ms.Sc.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- MERIENCE
- 
  MERIENCE
 Person in charge: Meritxell Martell Lamolla  Profile:
 
 Degree in Environmental Sciences.
					PhD in environmental sciences focused on public participation and sustainability.
					Executive Programme of Director of Communications.
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 MERIENCE managing director, Dr. Martell, is currently participating in an FP7 EU
					project InSOTEC looking at socio-technical challenges of geological disposal, where
					she is leading a WP and collaborating in the dissemination and communication of the
					project. In addition, she has coordinated and participated in several European R&D
					projects in the previous Framework Programme FP6 on governance of radioactive
					waste, such as OBRA (European Observatory for Long-term Governance on
					Radioactive Waste Management), CIP (Cowam In Practice), SAPIERR2. Apart from
					participating in European projects, Dr. Martell has been recently involved as IAEA
					expert, providing advice to the communicators in the Agency of Natural Resources
					and Energy of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry in Japan and its relevant
					organisations. Other IAEA expert missions where Dr. Martell has been involved have
					addressed the remediation of uranium tailings in Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan. In addition,
					she has been collaborating with different groups and committees of the Nuclear
					Energy Agency (NEA) looking at crisis communication and stakeholder involvement.
					At present, Merience is involved in promoting a 2-year initiative bringing together a
					wide range of actors and pooling knowledge and experience to debate on the Spanish
					energy mix. This Spanish Energy Mix Forum (SEMF) aims to develop mutual
					understanding on low carbon energy alternatives in a way that can encompass
					societal needs and environmental, economic, technical and social concerns.
 Contribution:
 
 In TRUST, Merience will be leading a WP on public involvement, communication and
					liabilities, where the social aspects of the CCS will be investigated and the
					dissemination of the project will be developed.
 Key Personnel
 
 Meritxell Martell 
					(communication and public involvement expert)
 
- LAPIDOTH
- 
  LAPIDOTH
 Person in charge: Mr. Eli Kamar  Profile:
 
 Lapidoth specializes in on-shore oil exploration and performs on a commercial basis,
					deep drilling for both oil exploration and water supply. It operates the Heletz site.
 Relevant Expertise:
 
 Deep Drilling and related activities.
 Contribution:
 
 Shall provide the site for injection, drill a new deep well for monitoring, three
					shallower wells for seismic monitoring, and reenter one well for the leakage
					experiment.
 Key Personnel
 
 Rami Matmon: Chief operator.