Wednesday, 22 June 2016

Getting Biblical on CO2: How to turn your enemies to stone

Wouldn’t it be nice to have the power to turn your enemies into stone? It sounds like something out of the Old Testament or Greek myth, but it’s pretty darn effective. Unless they are careening down a hillside, at whose base you happen to be sitting, stones are relatively inert and harmless. Sadly, despite what religious texts or Tolkien books tell us, this probably isn’t a realistic strategy in the face of conflict.
Happily, no one told that to a group of scientists working in Iceland, who last week published the results of their 4-year research on turning one of humanities greatest foes into a ready supply of paperweights.


You’d be hard pressed to find a more fitting place for an epic showdown than Iceland. Desolate volcanic landscapes mix with moody weather to make it seem like the end of the world is always close at hand. Unfortunately, the gravitas of the setting is somewhat undone by the enemy we are talking about: a colourless, odorless, tasteless gas that every animal of Earth exhales but humans have found a special proclivity for pumping into the air. You know it as carbon dioxide (CO2).

Oddly enough, Iceland is one of the last places you would expect to find people working on a solution to carbon emissions. This isolated outpost of humanity in the North Atlantic gets virtually all of its power from geothermal sources. That is, the island is one big volcano, and so, they use its heat to keep the lights burning. This approach eliminates something like 95% of CO2 emissions associated with electricity production, but apparently that isn’t good enough for Icelandic scientists.


Wanting to inch a little closer to that zero-carbon goal, researchers at Hellisheidi power plant, near Reykjavik, decided to take some of their geothermal power plant’s paltry CO2 emissions and test an approach to neutralizing them; many people thought that was ridiculously impractical - ”that” being to pump the CO2 emissions deep into the ground and wait for them to turn to stone.


As you can imagine, this is a desirable way to fight climate change. The biggest challenge with carbon emissions is that gases are masterful escape artists. Put them into any container with even the slightest breach and they will soon be out mixing in the atmosphere like debutants at a cocktail party. Stone, by contrast, just tends to sit there and not do anything, like an awkward college freshman at their first frat party.

The science behind this idea is actually fairly straightforward. We have long known that when a type of rock called basalt is exposed to CO2 and a little water, the carbon will precipitate (solidify). The problem, like all things in geology, is a matter of time. In the type of uncontrolled field setting the Icelandic team was dealing with, ambitious estimates assume you would need eight years before a significant amount of the carbon was locked up.


So imagine the surprise (and presumed embarrassment) on the face of naysayers when the team from Hellisheidi reported that the process began in just a few months and that, after 2 years, 95 to 98% of the carbon injected into the rocks has turned into chalky, lifeless carbonate minerals. The process so far has been relatively small scale, pumping about 5,000 tonnes of CO2 underground per year – equal to about 15 Americans annual CO2 emissions – but it is promising.


For one thing, basalt as a resource isn’t exactly rare. Places like the Pacific Northwest, South America, and other volcanically endowed landscapes are ripe with it. Better yet, most of the Earth’s crust, beneath the oceans, is basalt. The only thing safer than turning your enemy to stone, is then placing that stone a mile or so underwater.

The major challenge at this point is cost, which sits around $17 per tonne of CO2. This compares favourably with other methods of capturing carbon emissions (usually between $23 and $95 per tonne), but is still expensive when you want to deploy it on the roughly 40 billion tonnes of CO2 that humans put into the air every year.


Clearly, we have some work to do to figure out how to scale up this technology, and in the mean time, we all need to take a hint from Iceland and switch our energy systems to renewable sources like wind, solar, and geothermal power. But, even once we stop treating the atmosphere like a garbage dump, we’re going to need technology to clean up the mess we’ve already made. The Hellisheidi technology gets us one step closer.


12 comments:

custom writing service reviews said...

That was an awesome post and it was really interesting and I read it until the end which I usually don't do. By the way the animations and the description were perfect. Waiting for more.

raybanoutlet001 said...

zzzzz2018.5.7
christian louboutin shoes
dsquared2
kate spade outlet
canada goose jackets
michael kors outlet online
coach outlet
dolphins jerseys
kate spade handbags
valentino shoes
christian louboutin shoes

Unknown said...

rolex watches
marc jacobs handbags
kobe 9
tod's shoes
cheap jerseys china
roshe run
chanel bags
armani sunglasses
kristaps porzingis jersey
polo lacoste
2018.7.12linying

norhan said...



مكافحة حشرات بالخبر افضل شركة مكافحة حشرات بالخبر
مكافحة حشرات بمكة افضل شركة رش حشرات بمكة
مكافحة حشرات بالمدينة المنورة افضل شركة رش حشرات بالمدينة المنورة
مكافحة حشرات بالدمام افضل شركة مكافحة حشرات بالدمام

Anonymous said...

It's really a nice and helpful piece of information. I'm glad that you shared this helpful info with us. I recommend best dissertation writing services, I think you do not regret visiting and using this service!

Essay writing service online said...

All you truly need is a fluid that can convey a ton of oxygen, which lamentably excludes water. In spite of the fact that H2O is to a great extent made out of it, water commonly just contains about 1% broke down oxygen. That is essential for the explanation amphibian life is so delicate to disturbances in accessible oxygen. Dissertation writing services UK

Isabell Kiral said...

Sketch making is one of the best skill and many people learn this skill because they want to make their future secure and bright. Do you like this field? Coursework writing services.

christopher hale said...

You might even breathe in something nasty like cigarette smoke either on purpose (why?) or by accident. online dissertation writing services he Ace assignment is always there to support their pupils with dissertation writing services. We provide you with the leading service. Our papers allow the students

bamgosoo said...


Attractive section of content. I simply stumbled upon your blog and in accession capital to assert that I acquire in fact enjoyed
account your blog posts. Anyway I’ll be subscribing
on your augment or even I success you access constantly quickly.

Here's my website : -- ==>> 오피
(jk)


33카지노 said...

I was recommended this website by my cousin. I’m not sure whether this post is written by him as nobody else know such detailed about my problem.
You’re wonderful! Thanks! 33카지노

opbest said...



Hey I'm at work surfing around your blog from my new iphone 3gs! Just wanted to say I
love reading through your blog and look forward to all your posts! Carry on the superb work!

Review my page please: 휴게텔

(freaky)

TOTOSAFEDB33 said...

Hi everyone, it’s my first go to see at this web page, and paragraph,
I am very satisfied with visiting here. Thank you for good content. And please visit my website as well. 안전놀이터 모음