News 2026

2026: A Quick Review

July 1, 2026: Check out a new International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control publication by Sue Hovorka, Marcia Couëslan, and Charles Jenkins entitled, "Evolution of storage monitoring – update in response to commercial and regulatory drivers." Congratulations, Team!


July 1, 2026: Congratulations to Jungang Chen and Seyyed Hosseini for publishing, "Optimizing CO₂ storage management considering safety constraints in multi-stakeholder multi-site GCS projects: A Markov game perspective" in the International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control.


June 5, 2026: Special thanks to 1PointFive for hosting, and sponsoring the catering, for the GCCC’s Sponsors’ Meeting at the Ion District in Houston, TX. Approximately 30 participants attended the GCCC’s (hybrid) strategy meeting. Researchers Alex Bump, Vanessa Nunez-Lopez, Hailun Ni, Katherine Romanak, and Tip Meckel summarized GCCC research activities conducted over the last four years. For this occasion, Angela Luciano worked with the GCCC Team to compile a version of the GCCC’s 2022–2026 Retrospective Report for distribution.

In the late morning and early afternoon, Sue Hovorka led the audience into breakout sessions to brainstorm about key topics that helps set the GCCC team with the best line of research topics over the next 4 years. Input every four years allows the GCCC to better support our sponsors as well as the CCS industry's future success.

This strategy meeting is quite different in format from our typical technical meetings. This particular meeting initiates discussions for a document that the GCCC team will provide in 2027, known as our "Four-Year Big Plan," which serves as a compass guiding our future course of action. Special thanks to the GCCC’s Dolores van der Kolk and 1PointFive’s Victor Parra Galvis, Ashley Neal, and Colleen Williams who held a beautifully seamless meeting!


June 2, 2026: The National Ocean Industries Association and the Offshore Operators Committee hosted a meeting called the "Offshore CCS & New Frontiers" at the Rice University Baker Institute Center for Energy Studies. Thanks to the GCCC’s Alex Bump for presenting, "The State of Gulf Coast Carbon Capture & Storage (CCS)."

The agenda included topics, such as: Multi-use OCS management: oil & gas, wind, critical minerals, carbon sequestration, aquaculture, nuclear, etc.; ocean minerals and the path to commercialization; AI applications for offshore operations; BSEE and BOEM regulatory updates; and CCS.

Thanks to Ben Hilton for the photographs below!


May 18, 2026: The GCCC Team celebrated Ramón H. Treviño who retires at the end of May! Thank you, Ramón, for 29.5 years of service at the Bureau of Economic Geology!


May 15, 2026: Exciting news! Katherine Romanak was selected as a Lead Author for the upcoming 2027 IPCC Methodology Report on Carbon Dioxide Removal Technologies, Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage for National Greenhouse Gas Inventories.

Katherine will contribute to the topic of CO₂ Transport, Injection, and Geological Storage, bringing decades of experience in CCS monitoring, environmental assurance, and geological storage science to this important international effort.

The report will provide additional guidance for national greenhouse gas inventories and support the evolving global framework for carbon management and accounting.

Katherine looks forward to contributing alongside colleagues from around the world to advance rigorous, science-based approaches to CDR and CCUS! Congratulations, Katherine!


May 8, 2026: Congratulations to all students graduating this season! We are particularly proud of our students from the Gulf Coast Carbon Center who graduated today! GCCC students pictured here include: Edwina Owusu - Adjapong, Eddie Talen, Bimar Maulana, Javid Ali, and Ssu-Chi Yang! Hook'em, Horns!

Special thanks to advisors: Alex Bump, Tip Meckel, Sue Hovorka, Carlos A Uroza, and Ramon Gil-Egui. Way to go to the GCCC Team!


May 1, 2026: Ramón Treviño was featured in the Bureau of Economic Geology’s "Meet a Geoscientist" series, click here to watch.


April 27, 2026: Congratulations to PhD student, Melianna Ulfah! Melianna was awarded with the John Emery Adams Scholarship by the West Texas Geological Foundation. Congratulations, Melianna!


April 22, 2026: In celebration of Earth Day, Research Scientist Associate Angela Luciano, undergraduate Cecil Armstrong, and graduate student Farzana Rahman joined dozens of students, organizations, and community members for UT Austin's "Hooked on Earth Day Fair." Participants came together to explore practical approaches to sustainability on campus, including the GCCC’s research on carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology and how CCS plays a role in reducing emissions.

This event highlighted a range of student-led initiatives and local efforts—from solar-powered smoothies to campus sustainability programs—emphasizing how both individual actions and technological solutions contribute to a more sustainable future.

A subsurface model was used to demonstrate how CO₂ can be stored underground, helping visitors better understand the science behind CCS. Dry ice demonstrations highlighted observable, scientific properties of CO₂.

Visitors walked away with our CCS comic book, short educational stories, and resources to learn more about how CCS fits into sustainability, energy, and climate solutions. To learn more, check out our outreach resources, here.


April 21–22, 2026: The GCCC’s representatives Katherine Romanak and Alex Bump attended the 8th International Offshore Geologic CO₂ Storage Workshop in Bergen, Norway. They also attended a field trip to the Northern Lights Project.

Alex Bump had a presentation entitled, "Derisking composite confinement and implications for containment in layered systems" and presented, "Gulf Coast, USA" on behalf of Tip Meckel.

Katherine Romanak had a presentation entitled, "Monitoring solutions through Citizen Science." She also co-authored a presentation with Abdirahman Omar (NORCE) entitled, "STEMM-CCS – Cssep technique a review"


April 18, 2026: The GCCC’s Principal Investigator, Susan Hovorka, participated in Texas General Land Office’s (GLO's) "Coastal Roundup" public outreach event. This event is advertised as "a free, family-friendly event to showcase the work of the GLO, area organizations, and other state and federal agencies do to protect the Texas coast."

At this event, Susan presented a table display with TXLA CMC outreach materials at R.A. Apffel Beach, located in Galveston, TX. There were approximately 40 groups participating in the Coastal Roundup including several GLO departments, non-governmental organizations (NGO's) and contractors that work in the coastal zone.


TXLA CMC logo

April 11, 2026: A GCCC project manager, Ramón Treviño, participated in the Coastal Bend Bays Foundation’s annual "Earth Day / Bay Day" event at Corpus Christi’s "Heritage Park." Ramón presented a table display with GCCC outreach materials, which included demonstrating the presence of gaseous CO₂ in a glass container (despite it being invisible).

Other outreach materials showcased included a physical model of the Earth’s crust with permeable vs. non-permeable strata. The model included an injection "well," which allowed participants to inject air into permeable strata filled with water, thus simulating injecting CO₂ into saline aquifers isolated from shallower fresh-water aquifers. There were also samples of porous and permeable sandstone and non-permeable rock samples, which visitors could test for permeability by dropping water on them and watching the water imbibe into the permeable sandstone samples and not into the non-permeable rock sample. Finally, the exhibit included several flyers in English and Spanish and a comic book explaining the major concepts of CCS (carbon capture and sequestration or storage). The comic book was very popular with children and adults alike. More than 400 members of the public engaged with Ramón and the exhibit during the event.


March 30 – April 1, 2026: Members of the Gulf Coast Carbon Center will attend the SPE-AAPG-SEG CCUS conference:

  • Carlos Uroza will also chair Theme 5 on CO₂-EOR and Unconventional CO₂ Storage
  • Monday, March 30 – 11:40 am Oral Presentation, Theme 5, Waterway 6 & 7: Variabilities in Rock Quality in the Frio Formation, Onshore Texas, USA: Implications for CO2 Storage and Reservoir Injectivity – C. Uroza, S. Bhattacharya, S. Hovorka
  • Tuesday, March 31 – 9:20 am Oral Presentation, Theme 3, Waterway 8: 45Q Parity, Stacked Storage, and the GHGRP Verification Gap: LCA-based Economic Framework for CO₂-EOR with a U.S. Gulf Coast Example – R. Gil-Egui, V. Nuñez-Lopez
  • Tuesday, March 31 – 9:25 am Oral Presentation, Theme 4, Waterway 6 & 7: Sand Tank Visualization of the Effect of CO₂ Microbubble Injection on Plume Migration and Trapping – H. Ni, R. Okuno, and D. Tang
  • Tuesday, March 31 – 10:05 am Oral Presentation, Waterway 6 & 7: Access-Constrained Deployment of CO₂ Mineralization in Serpentinized Mafic and Ultramafic Rocks in the United States: A Source-to-Sink Assessment – R. Gil-Egui, E. Owusu-Adjapong, E. Ukar
  • Tuesday, March 31 – 3:40 pm Oral Presentation, Theme 6, Waterway 5: Are the Fears Justified? Observations of Gulf Coast Fault Seal and Implications for CCS – A. Bump & N. Espinoza

Posters: 

  • Tuesday, March 31 – 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Poster Presentation, Theme 8, Exhibition Hall: Classification and Calibration of Legacy Well Risks for CO₂ Storage in the Gulf Coast Basin – J. Ali & A. Bump
  • Tuesday, March 31 – 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Poster Presentation, Theme 9, Exhibition Hall: “Model–Map–Monitor”: Targeted Risk-Based Monitoring of CO₂ Migration – P. Arumugam & A. Bump
  • Tuesday, March 31 – 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Poster Presentation, Theme 7, Exhibition Hall: Optimized Numerical Modeling of Boundary Conditions for Geological CO₂ Storage – R. Ramadhan & S. A. Hosseini
  • Wednesday, April 1 – 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Poster Presentation, Theme 5, Exhibition Hall: Assessing CO₂ Storage Potential within the Sunda Strait, Offshore Indonesia –B. Maulana, T. Meckel, C. Uroza, D. Ralanarko

March 6, 2026: Research Assistant Professor Hailun Ni was Invited as a "PhD opponent" by the Reservoir Physics group at the Department of Physics and Technology, the University of Bergen, for the dissertation defense of Dr. Hilde Halsøy. Her dissertation is entitled, "A Laboratory Workflow for Designing Carbon-dioxide Foam Formulations". also presented a guest lecture to the same group titled "Sand Tank Experiments for CO₂ Storage with Light Transmission Imaging".


March 5, 2026: Research Professor Katherine Romanak provided a remote presentation to the 49th Session of the Scientific Groups of London Convention and 20th Session of the Scientific Groups of the London Protocol entitled, “Climate-Driven Ocean Variability and the Challenge of Monitoring: Lessons from a CCS case study.” To see the agenda for this event, click here.


February 23–25, 2026: Research Assistant Professor Hailun Ni was invited by CO2CRC to present a talk entitled "Sand Tank Visualization of the Effect of CO₂ Microbubble Injection on Plume Migration and Trapping" at the 2026 CO2CRC CCS Symposium held in Melbourne, Australia.


February 23, 2026: Congratulations to the GCCC’s Ph.D. Student, Romal Ramadhan, and his advisor, Seyyed Hosseini, for publishing a manuscript in Advances in Water Resources. Their new manuscript is entitled “Gradual modifiers for storage-conserving truncated porous media models: Accuracy and efficiency in CCS flow simulation.” Learn more about this article here.


February 10–12, 2026: GCCC representatives, Sue Hovorka and Hailun Ni, attended the 2026 Groundwater Protection Council (GWPC) UIC Conference in Fort Worth, TX. Sue and Hailun co-taught a short course focusing on Class VI Regulator Training. They taught the following three modules entitled: 1) Training - Review of Permit-Relevant Properties & Characteristics of CO2; 2) Assessing Sufficiency of Storage Site Characterization (Description & Static Model); and Pre-Injection Testing & Characterization During Well Construction.


February 10, 2026: Thanks to Alex Bump for participating in a roundtable discussion hosted by the International Conservation Caucus Foundation (ICCF) in Washington, D.C. Alex alongside Erik Milito (National Ocean Industries Association), and Hanafi Younes (Captura Corp) discussed offshore carbon capture and storage (CCS) in the outer continental shelf.

In this roundtable, “congressional staff learned about economic opportunities with regard to offshore CCS/direct ocean capture, and how best to align investments in these technologies with benefits to sustainability and improved offshore safety.” The meeting included 25 staffers and representatives from non-governmental organizations who asked great questions about CCS, CO₂-enhanced oil recovery (EOR), next steps, and how they could support opportunities.


January 29, 2026: Sue Hovorka and Vanessa Nuñez-López attended a Powerhouse Texas meeting. For 2026–2028, Sue Hovorka is serving on the Energy Policy Advisory Council (EPAC). The purpose of the EPAC is to give lawmakers trusted advisors and to serve as nonpartisan thought partners to address complex energy issues. The goal is to help lawmakers also address pressure-test ideas and navigate tradeoffs before decisions are made.


January 28, 2026: At UTCCS-8, the Gulf Coast Carbon Center (GCCC) was surprised by the Bureau of Economic Geology’s directorate with a celebratory cake for conducting carbon storage research for over 25 years now! Special thanks to the Bureau’s Director Lorena Moscardelli for sending the cake along with Jay Kipper to congratulate the GCCC Team during a UTCCS-8 luncheon. Tip Meckel, Katherine Romanak, and Ramón Treviño also roasted, we mean, toasted Sue Hovorka and the great advances she has made to carbon storage. She Hovorka started investigating CO₂ subsurface injections long before this technology was on anyone’s radar. Congratulations to Sue, and the GCCC Team through the years, for their great advancements that continue to have global impacts. Read more about this Bureau’s celebration of the GCCC here.


January 27–28, 2026: The Gulf Coast Carbon Center hosted UTCCS-8, which is the eighth organized conference offered every other year that highlights both carbon capture and carbon storage research at The University of Texas at Austin. This meeting was hosted by the Gulf Coast Carbon Center (GCCC), the Texas Carbon Management Program (TxCMP), and the UT Energy Institute. Special thanks to Entropy Inc. for sponsoring this event.

This year, the UTCCS-8 event evolved from a 2-day hybrid event into a 1-day virtual and 1-day hybrid meeting due to a winter-storm system that moved through Central Texas on Saturday, January 24, 2026. This development did not turn away many carbon capture and storage enthusiasts, since ~70 in-person attendees were present out of the 90 people who registered to attend in person for Wednesday, January 28th, 2026. Overall, we had 150 people register for the hybrid event, and sponsors of the Gulf Coast Carbon Center were able to share the virtual meeting details internally for those who had not registered.

In summary, there were 61 presentations scheduled over the 2-day period with two sessions running concurrently: One session had a carbon storage focus led by the GCCC, and the other session had a carbon capture focus led by TxCMP. GCCC presenters included Alex Bump, Angela Luciano, Carlos Uroza, Katherine Romanak, Jungang (Gordon) Chen, Sue Hovorka, Hailun Ni, Tip Meckel, Vanessa Nunez-Lopez. The GCCC's invited speakers included Tim Dixon (IEAGHG), Shuman Yu (UT Austin - PGE), Shujuan Mao (UT Austin - EPS), and Ryosuke Okuno (UT Austin - PGE).

Read a summary of this event by IEAGHG’s Tim Dixon here. Access the agenda and publicly available presentations on the UTCCS-8 page here.


January 14, 2026: The GCCC’s Principal Investigator, Susan Hovorka, is a speaker at a forum hosted by United States Energy Association (USEA) that makes carbon capture, utilization, and storage information more accessible. Learn more about this event here.

 


January 7, 2026: The GCC’s Sue Hovorka and Tip Meckel previously attended several planning meetings to support preparation of a "roadmap" for carbon management in Texas, prepared by the Great Plains Institute, which has now been released: View the Texas Carbon Management Roadmap and Factsheet.


January 1, 2026: The State Geologic Survey of Texas, known as the Bureau of Economic Geology, has an exciting video series that highlights one of our scientists. Click here to learn more about the Gulf Coast Carbon Center’s (GCCC’s) Environmental Geochemist, Katherine Romanak, and her transition from being a volcanologist to an environmental geochemist working on carbon storage. Watch the video to discover how she found her dream job at the Bureau of Economic Geology's GCCC. Meet other scientists at the Bureau of Economic Geology through this great video experience by clicking here.

Click here for "RI0283. Geological CO2 Sequestration Atlas of Miocene Strata, Offshore Texas State Waters"

RI0283

For a flyer on GCCC mission, activities, impact, and goals, please click here.


University of Texas at Austin
University of Texas

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