In the continental part of Croatia oil and gas were discovered in more than 60 locations. Most reservoirs are in the Neogene/Quaternary basin infill, but the largest ones are found in the basement rocks. Decades of exploration left a significant vintage data set and substantial knowledge of the subsurface geology and reservoir properties. Since 2005 the research efforts were redirected to CO
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geological storage capacity estimates and the first results were obtained relatively quickly. All identified potential storage objects: the deep saline aquifers (DSA), depleted hydrocarbon fields (DHF) and the oil reservoirs that are suitable for CO2-EOR can be regarded as prospective. DSAs are defined on a regional scale and their estimated capacity is the highest (2,584 Gt), but this is “theoretical capacity” that can only be used to outline the total resource base. The storage capacity estimated for the selected 14 DHFs sums up to 143,6 Mt and this is a viable capacity that might be developed as soon as particular field stops with production, but the most promising storage objects are the 7 fields that have reservoirs suitable for CO2-EOR operations. The most recent models have revealed that 7 active EOR fields operating in parallel between 2025-2040 could store up to 12.4 Mt CO2/year, while producing approximately 12.4 Mt/year of additional oil. This is very high for a country with only 5.5 Mt CO2/year in point sources.