Zero-emission Power Plants Proposed 737
ckbreckenridge writes "Supercompact, superfast, superpowerful turbines called ZEPPS (zero-emission power plants), designed to combat global warming, could help produce the electrical power needed to keep up with 21st century demand. They would consume methane and oxygen and produce liquid carbon dioxide, which could be sequestered underground. The current electricity grid would need to be replaced by a 'supergrid' across the USA, says Jesse H. Ausubel in The Industrial Physicist. Work on such a system should start as soon as possible, since CO2 levels leaped up 2 ppm in the past two years as global warming becomes more of a reality."
How is this diffrent? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:2)
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:4, Insightful)
All at once is the problem here. (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem with storing vast amounts of CO2 underground is when it does get released and it will, it will flood the atmosphere with CO2. In smaller amounts plants can convert the CO2 to oxygen. So we could concievably add CO2 to the atmosphere as long as we increase rain forest size and create a balance to the CO2. But an extremely large amount of stored CO2 being released because of tectonic motion is not a pleasant thought. Everywhere man inhabits, we kill vast amounts of plant life. We now have billions of humans on the earth consuming resources and producing waste. How long do you think we can sustain that? We have to discover "new" sources of energy, shrink the worlds population dramatically and take care of our resources. All these things are really tough problems. But as long as we as a world, not just a few industrialized countries, work towards solutions. we can eventually solve these problems. But the current situation is while some countries work towards solving these problems, many others don't, instead they get exemptions because they are poor countries. Worse yet, their populations are growing rapidly because they are having 15 kids per family all born into poverty.
Re:All at once is the problem here. (Score:5, Insightful)
Worse yet, some industrialised nations exempt themselves from the effort because they just don't give a fuck, and would rather drive a separate hummer for each member of the family
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:5, Funny)
"Human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together, mass hysteria!" --Ghostbusters
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:4, Informative)
Wheat growers in North Dakota [ndwheat.com] beg to differ.
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:4, Interesting)
If you can harvest that plant material for use as either a chemical fuel source (ethanol or conversion into crude oil via chemical depolymerization) or as a feed source for livestock. If you can use the plant material as feedstock for something like a hog confinement outfit, you'll be able to capture "processed plant material" that can produce methane to put back into the system, as well as fertilizer for fields and meat for food.
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:3, Informative)
do() || ! do() && try = NULL;
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:3, Informative)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:5, Interesting)
Simply put: carbon is rediculously useful stuff. Any method of sequestering a large portion of it is going to have some kind of benefit down the road.
Off the top of my head, i'd say that once carbon-nanotube based materials are practical, the world will become pretty hungry for *any* source of carbon at a concentration higher than what's present in the atmosphere. The trick is taking something like CO2 and turning it into graphite or something else more readily useful for industry.
On a very different tangent, the DOE also suggests that you can use some chemistry to keep it from ever becoming gaseous (reduce chance of air pollution). They also suggest using bioremediation to convert the CO2 back into something useful like methane.
http://www.fe.doe.gov/programs/sequestr
More realistically, if plants are forced to trap their CO2 output, we're more likely to see them combine it with other materials and convert it into carbonates that we already use in industry: like chalk.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
The grandparent poster made a good point (Score:5, Insightful)
But say instead the plants are eaten, by growing fruit and vegetables (which is the obvious choice vs. non-edible plants). However the carbon will still make its way back to the atmosphere by being released by the animals that ate those plants.
This shows clearly what the real problem is. We are mining carbon from underground in the form of crude oil, and have no way of getting it back down there. Therefore we will always have a positive sum of carbon.
Until we find a way to convert CO2 into straight carbon, the carbon that we have released from underground will always be with us up here.
Where did the oil come from? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The grandparent poster made a good point (Score:3, Insightful)
Unless, of course we--oh--bury it in liquid form underground...
Re:The grandparent poster made a good point (Score:3, Interesting)
If we take the carbon from the ground, combine it with oxygen, then pump it back down into the ground, how do we replace the oxygen?
Re:The grandparent poster made a good point (Score:3, Informative)
At that point, given enough energy, we can re-disolve the CO2 into magma - remember that there is a lot more CO2 (and other gases) dissolved in the liquid magma than all the power plants will ever produce.
You fix the problem by fixing the carbon (Score:3, Informative)
Easy process, just add hydrogen!
Seriously, there are industrial processors you can buy which convert hydrogen and CO2 into methanol (CO2 + 3 H2 -> CH3OH + H2O). If you have any process which can generate enough hydrogen cheaply enough, you can use it to "fix" carbon into methanol. From there
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:3, Insightful)
And after it's eaten, it's metabolized and then breathed out as CO2. Try thinking beyond step 1.
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:5, Funny)
And then we'll cremate them, and...aw, fuck.
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:5, Insightful)
The amount of waste produced by a nuclear power plant is fairly small, wheras the amount of CO2 produced is on the order of the amount of fuel it burns.
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:5, Interesting)
CO2 also doesn't explode, so it's safe to store. And simple methods could be used in the future to turn it back into hydrocarbons, if someone wants to go to the trouble.
And here's a thought: we could eventually learn to regulate the heat buildup in the earth's atmosphere by controlled release of the stored LCO2. If an ice age cometh, we can stopeth it by metering out the LCO2 just enough to increase the greenhouse effect to stop the cooling. Conversely, we can mitigate the atmospheric warming we are definitely experiencing today by not flooding the atmosphere with the CO2 we are currently tossing up.
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:4, Informative)
Um
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Glad you asked... (Score:4, Informative)
A friend who worked in the Hazardous Waste disposal industry lamented the ignorance of many protesters who came out to his site and harrassed the workers. They didn't know the difference between Hazardous and Toxic waste. CO2 is not toxic. In high concentrations it can be harmful (depending on the lifeform), but that is the definition of Hazardous. Toxic means it does harm even in small concentrations.
Example:
1,000 gallons of horse urine if dumped on a field would probably kill the grass, but if dilluted and spread over time it would not.
1 milligram of plutonium spread on a field would kill the grass, no matter how you dilluted it and grass wouldn't grow again for a long time.
I'm sure I didn't explain this as well as he could have, but I hope you get the gist of it.
Re:Glad you asked... (Score:4, Informative)
I'm sure I didn't explain this as well as he could have, but I hope you get the gist of it.
Your concept is correct, but your facts are horribly incorrect and it distracts from your point.
WIkipedia [wikipedia.org] describes the myth of Pu toxicity you refer to.
A Perspective on the Dangers of Plutonium [llnl.gov] also deals in reality on the effects and dangers of Plutonium. Plutonium's danger lies in it's radioactivity and a Mg spread out over a field of grass is all but inconsequential. Junkscience.com [junkscience.com] has a short blurb about the effects of low-level radioactivity that would suprise many who have been led to beleive that radioactivity is a large and deady threat.
Toxic is a relative term, not an absolute, and there are multiple avenues of toxicity. Most laymen use the term to mean a substance's chemical toxicity.
Plutonium's chemotoxicity is less than that of caffiene, acetiminophen, and so on. It's radiotoxicity is 1/200th that of Radium, a naturally occuring substance in soil.
So basically, that horse urine is a greater threat to that field of grass than that Mg of plutonium.
Re:Glad you asked... (Score:5, Informative)
BZZZZZZZT! Nuclear bullshit warning! Nuclear bullshit warning! Nuclear bullshit warning! The previous post may have contained bullshit that could be hazardous to your health!
Sorry, to bum your high, but while plutonium is a bad thing it is by no means as toxic as everyone seems to think it is. If you read the encyclopedia entry [nationmaster.com] on plutonium you find that the toxicity has been much exaggerated. The section on oral toxicity in the excerpt below is especially informative.
Re:Glad you asked... (Score:3, Informative)
No it won't. Read the encyclopedia entry.
I recall that the only treatment for radiation poisoning (from PL) during the Manhattan project was immediate high amputation, if possible. And the body of the dead bastard has to be sealed in lead, because IT was now dangerous.
Well if you can't produce an actual source for this then it
Much more hazardous on an immediate basis. (Score:5, Informative)
Much more hazardous, especially on an immediate basis.
Liquid CO2, pushed down injection wells under pressure, occasionally springs a leak. When this happens you suddenly get a giant bubble of CO2 on (and in) the ground, displacing the oxygen and killing everybody and everything (even plants if it persists in the soil long enough) for miles around.
This has happened when CO2 injection was used to pressurize oil wells to squeeze more oil out of the gound.
A similar phenomenon happens naturally (though fortunately VERY rarely) when largely CO2 volcanic gasses vent into a deep still lake (such as in a volcanic crater). The gasses disolve, carbonating the lower waters. Then suddenly something disturbs the water and some of the carbonated water comes up and starts to bubble - rapidly "turning over" and boiling out the CO2 in the rest of the lake in a matter of minutes and releasing a similar ground-hugging toxic bubble.
Think of a shaken soda can the size of Lake Tahoe.
if we continue storring all this wouldn't eventually run out of place to put it?
Nuclear, at least, takes up very little space and decays over years/centuries/millenia (depending on the isotope - generally the hotter the faster). Some of its components are also useful and can be separated out and put to work. Others can be "burned" in nuclear reactions into less hazardous and/or more useful material.
That's not to say it's safe or good stuff. Some of it is horrid. But "running out of room" isn't the problem. (Keeping it in its room until it promises to be a good little kid and MEANS it is the problem.)
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:5, Insightful)
Oil won't escape from containment and (supposedly) cause catastrophic global warming...
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:5, Funny)
That's why we have to do all the work on its behalf. The world's not going to pollute itself! We all have to pitch in and do our part!
Insert obligatory cynical anti-GWB big oil reference here.
--Dan
Re:How is this diffrent? (Score:4, Informative)
To some degree these are valid attacks on the current Republican administration. Many people are wondering where the small-government Republicans of the '90s went.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
.... Duh? (Score:4, Insightful)
You are going to combat the excessive amounts of CO2 in the atmosphere by...producing more CO2? Even 'sequestered underground,' that isn't much of an option.
Re:.... Duh? (Score:3, Funny)
That's what I get for not doing a preview...
Re:.... Duh? (Score:4, Insightful)
The best place for it is in the ground (as happens in this process, air->ground-as-liquid) rather than in the air (as happens when you burn fossil fuels, ground-as-coal->air).
As long as it doesnt leach out and contaminate the area (not likley, and even if it does it's not serious) then this is exactly the right thing to do.
Re:.... Duh? (Score:2, Insightful)
Yep, doesn't sound 'zero emission' to me either.
The other thing that caught me is that its producing liquid carbon dioxide? I thought carbon dioxide sublimates, as in goes from solid to gas with no liquid step. Or, if it has a liquid stage, its only under very specific conditions of temperature and pressure.
I am not a chemist, but it doesn't sound right to me...
Re:.... Duh? (Score:3, Insightful)
This is the difference between being 'emmitted' and 'produced.' The idea, I think, is that it's not being spewed uncontrollably into the atmosphere.
Re:.... Duh? (Score:5, Informative)
It's pressure that makes the difference. At atmospheric pressure CO2 doesn't have a liquid phase. At higher pressures it does. In fact, the way you make dry ice (at least used to be) taking the pressure off some liquid CO2, letting some evaporate to chill the rest into a solid.
The proposed power plants operate at high pressure including the exhaust stream. So all you need to do is cool the exhaust and you have liquid CO2.
Re:.... Duh? (Score:5, Insightful)
If those chambers are capable of holding oil and natural gas for millions of years, they are certainly capable of holding CO2 as well.
In fact, newer drilling operations often inject CO2 into the well in order to pressurize the chamber and assist in extracting the last drops of oil from a dried out oil chamber.
The idea of storing CO2 underground might sound crazy to you, but that's only because you've never done any serious research into the problem of carbon sequestration.
I'm not certain that this is the best possible solution -- I think we need to be looking at nuclear fuels instead of better ways to control CO2 emissions from petroleum -- but it's not crazy.
Re:.... Duh? (Score:5, Informative)
It's nuclear power. There is no other technology available that has sufficient output, whilst not outputting CO2 that will put the Florida Quays any further underwater.
The common argument in return is saving CO2 isn't much use if you make the planet uninhabitable due to reactors melting down. Well, the Chinese, with some help from the Germans, have very kindly solved this problem for us [wired.com]. Go check the link out - it's to wired.com - they have developed a nuclear reactor that doesn't go critical when the coolant system is switched off.
We can save the planet, if we're willing to get over the Cold War era stereotypes.
Re:.... Duh? (Score:3, Informative)
A promising technology is discussed in this story [slashdot.org].
Zero Emissions? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Zero Emissions? (Score:3, Informative)
Methane source? (Score:5, Interesting)
You can convert coal and oil to methane, but it isn't a clean process by any stretch of the imagination.
I doubt existing natural gas supplies would last long under this proposed plan.
Re:Methane source? (Score:4, Funny)
*Ducks*
Re:Methane source? (Score:5, Funny)
Or perhaps pig manure, ala Mad Max.
Re:Methane source? (Score:5, Funny)
The article neglected to mention that beans were to be enforced as the staple diet for the whole planet. Initially every citizen will be expected to report daily to their nearest power plant for 'fuel' retrieval but it is envisaged that within a few years there will be sufficient levels of methane for direct extraction from the air in the major cities.
It goes without saying a ban on all naked flames will be required in the major metropolitan areas.
Re:Methane source? (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, if we're smart, we'd set up big anaerobic digestors as part of our wastewater treatment systems and capture the methane produced as a byproduct. Two birds, one stone. (Incidentally, a number of landfills already do this to generate onsite power rather than just flaring it off.)
Re:Methane source? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Methane source? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Methane source? (Score:3, Informative)
Read the article and you see it isn't about methane so much, It's about nuclear and hydrogen, and airborne pies.
What to do with excess Co2 (Score:3, Funny)
Still burning hydrocarbons though (Score:5, Interesting)
--
It's all about the cash [slashdot.org]
Canadian Alabaska reserves (Score:3, Informative)
Will they ever learn? (Score:5, Insightful)
What we need is real solutions, not some half-assed band-aid effort. This is not a solution, but a cop-out.
Re:Will they ever learn? (Score:4, Informative)
"Warming it up" won't make it boil.
Re:Will they ever learn? (Score:3, Informative)
Thermodynamics isn't that hard, folks.
Lake Nyos in Cameroon (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Lake Nyos in Cameroon (Score:5, Interesting)
Sequester the CO2 in Coca Cola (Score:5, Funny)
Methanol Power Plants? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Methanol Power Plants? (Score:3, Informative)
That's because ethanol takes a significant amount of energy to produce, often more than you get out when you burn it. Now, it may be possible, in areas where there's consistent sunshine, to use solar heating in ethanol production, but it will require a lot of non-ethanol energy from some souce to produce that ethanol.
It also introduces new safety problems of its own. AFAIR ethanol burns invisibly, so it's not exactly an ideal fu
Re:Methanol Power Plants? (Score:5, Informative)
Reduce Demand, Not Supply (Score:5, Insightful)
* Don't you just love that phrase? It's like 'solutions'. My waste solution is to sequester my used food wrappers and banana peels in the city dump. Hey, that does sound better than stinking up the environment with trash, doesn't it? OTOH the next time I serve jury duty, now that I know what 'sequestered' means I'll fight 'em tooth an nail.
Non convincing. (Score:3, Informative)
Please study statistics. Please realize that a sample over 2 years when Earth existed for billions of years don't mean a thing. Global warming may be a reality, as it may be caused by humans, or part of a natural cycle, or part of a natural cycle human activity accelerated.
In my book, 2 ppm over 2 years, considering error and all, isn't a good reason to start producing these plants 'as soon as possible'.
Carbon sequestration (Score:5, Informative)
The problem with all of these is you have to worry about the re-emergence of the CO2. Limestone seems like a good option because you just have to keep it dry. The downside is that limestone is heavy and even though the production is exothermic, producing lime has not been worked out. Pressurizing CO2 and storing it underground works, unless it leaks out. Then you have the same problem. Liquid bubbles are good if you have a very high pressure place to store them (the ocean), but the long term effect is acidification of the ocean and exhaustion of the carrying capacity (estimated to be around 1000-1500Gtons, we produce around 3Gtons/year).
There aren't any easy answers. However long term, since coal is about 57% of current electricity in the U.S., it's not going away. What carbon sequestration will do is allow us to bridge the gap economically and technologically between high and low carbon fuel sources.
I'm a big fan of wind, but there are still lots of hurdles.
Zero Emission Power Plants Using Solid Oxide Fuel (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.netl.doe.gov/publications/proceedings /01/vision21/v211-5.PDF
wikipedia link for methanol (Score:3, Interesting)
The language we use... (Score:3, Insightful)
Moving oil from underground to the surface is not the same as "producing" oil.
And breeder reactors do not create more fuel than they consume.
These may all be worthy activities, but let's try not to engage in magical thinking.
As Barry Commoner observed: "Everything must go someplace. Everything is connected to everything else. There is no such thing as a free lunch."
Whats the motivation? (Score:3, Interesting)
Not meaning to be gloomy, but industry will follow the path of least cost unless standards dictate otherwise. If not for "bleeding heart California liberals and environuts" you wouldn't even have the mileage standards we enjoy today in our vehicles - they were derided as "impossible" by the auto industry in the day.
Re:Whats the motivation? (Score:5, Interesting)
Every group seems to take turns saving us and screwing us over.
That said, you're absolutely right. Bush's Clean Air Act is like a line from Orwell's 1984 doublespeak.
Wrong Direction (Score:3, Insightful)
The real solution is twofold: use more efficient powerplants (use waste heat from powerplants rather than dumping it into rivers and oceans), and more importantly, reduce consumption.
Quit trying to freeze us out! (Score:3, Interesting)
Where I lived, [cityrating.com] a return to the long-term global average temperature [freeserve.co.uk] (about 5C warmer than now) would be great. It might turn North Africa into a greenbelt again [faithweb.com], too, just like it used to be. That would really help with the famines there! I know change is rough on everyone, but the poor dirt farmers would be a lot better off with an extra growing season. I really think that global warming is just too good to be true.
How much CO2 did Mt. St. Helens vent last eruption? How does that compare to the CO2 from power generation? This link [radix.net] claims that human CO2 inputs are at least an order of magnitude smaller than the natural output of CO2, and that that tips the balance towards increasing CO2 levels.
I really don't believe that idea, but just in case there is something to it, I say: go burn something. I'm sick of shivering!
Supercompact, superfast, superpowerful (Score:4, Insightful)
[Rant]
I am so very tired of overused adjectives, and "super" is the worst of them. Everything is super-something. Here we get three in a row, and another one further down in the summary paragraph. I don't even know what they mean anymore. How compact? How fast? How powerful compared to current units? This has gone on for years, and communicates nothing anymore. So this is my super-sized outburst.
[/Rant]
Score Super Insightful (Score:5, Funny)
yet lameness filter attacks
my haiku deflects
filter returns blow
poem redoubles it's effort
will it be enough?
enemy unslain
patience wearing so thin
anticipation
revelation comes
slashcode prohibits colon
title corrected
All you need to know .... (Score:5, Interesting)
We are talking several hundred billion dollars, if not a trillion plus.
He then goes on to say it would take 100 years and 1 trillion dollars.
In other words "aint' gonna happen".
Cost (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you have any idea how many power plants (not to mention co-gens) there are in the US? A shitload. I know because I sell to them.
Great ideas come to fruition only if they can get funded. And we are talking a LOT of funding in this case. I mean, look at HRSG's (heat recovery steam generators). Those are here NOW -- and most plants can't "upgrade" because of the money.
Even if this worked... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Even if this worked... (Score:3, Insightful)
No, because the oxygen comes from the biosphere (plants). If we reduce atmospheric CO2 to pre-industrial levels, the plants in the biosphere (primarily in the ocean) will quickly replace the lost oxygen through photosynthesis.
The
Sky Falling, Get Your Sky Helmets Right Here! (Score:4, Insightful)
What a crock. This "solution" isn't a solution at all. If liquid CO2 in deep wells or the ground were a long-term sustainable storage mechanism for carbon, why is it that there is no such carbon storage existing naturally? Limestone, biomass, (living things, oil, gas), and oceans are all viable carbon storage media. I have no reason to believe the process described is a safe or effective way to store carbon so as to ensure indefinitely that it does not end up in the atmosphere.
It would be much better to continue research on other power sources, some of which are already commercially viable, or continue research on making lime from something other than limestone. If all that sounds too hard, plant a fucking tree. It'll do more long-term good than trying to sell people a way to make CO2 some future generation's problem.
There are only three kinds of energy available to us: solar, nuclear, and kinetic. The kinetic energy is that of the planet's motion through space; it includes a rotational component, its motion around the sun, the sun's motion around the galaxy, and the galaxy's motion through intergalactic space. We do not want to tap either of the first two (this would result in much greater climate change, since earth would turn more slowly and/or move closer to the sun), and the other two are impractical to exploit. Therefore we are left with either nuclear power or solar (light) energy and its immediate derivatives: wind, falling water, solar heat, and thermal differential. If we cannot find ways to make use of the five solar energy sources, or a way to make exploitation of nuclear energy safe, we will find our current living standards unsustainable within 200 years. This junk is just a temporary hack that would cost more in the long run than just finding cleaner energy sources.
sheesh (Score:5, Funny)
I keep "proposing" zero emmisions plants all the time, but as soon as I type the word "nuclear" around here, everyone gets all squirrly ...
A better use for carbon dioxide. (Score:3, Interesting)
I think this paints a complete picture of the future of transportation: a plug-in diesel/electric hybrid running on biodiesel. The batteries are charged from zero-polution electric plants which feed the carbon dioxide to algae farms which create the oil for biodiesel. The car runs most of the day on the electricity, but switches to diesel when the battery gets low. IMHO this is a far more realistic scenario than the fuel-cell which is getting a good deal more political attention than it deserves at thsi stage.
This seems like a stunningly dangerous proposal (Score:4, Informative)
Problem is, every so often, the carbon dioxide gets out. And lots of people die. Now, there are degassing projects which release the gas from the lakes into the atmosphere in a gradual controlled process.
Degassing [umich.edu]
The thermodynamics seems bogus. (Score:4, Informative)
This guy talks about 3000 RPM as a novel, high, shaft speed. Standard power generation turbines normally run at 3600 RPM, or sometimes 1800 RPM, to synch with the power grid. Modern microturbines [microturbine.com] run up to 96,000 RPM. (Yes, at last, Capstone Turbine isn't vaporware any more. You can actually buy a 60KW generator from them. This is an option worth considering if you need backup power for your data center.) Only 24% efficient, though. General Electric's most efficient gas turbines have reached 60%. (Big turbines are more efficient than little ones.)
Turbine technology is up against materials limits. Vast amounts of effort (many billions of dollars) have been put into finding better materials for turbine blades, because this limits aircraft performance. Current blades are single crystals of metal, often with a ceramic coating. Pure ceramic blades have been made, but have tensile strength and brittleness problems. The turbine this guy is talking about requires materials way beyond anything that exists today.
If it's thermodynamically possible to build a big machine of the type this guy is talking about, it should possible to build a little one right now.
No One Solution Will Solve This Problem (Score:3, Insightful)
It will take more than one idea or technology to solve this problem. Windmills, for instance, might be a complementary solution. Windmills take energy directly out of the atmosphere, which can help counteract the most direct effects of global warming. I believe I saw a post here on /. that said that if 95% of the world's energy was produced by windmills, we would be extracting more energy from the atmosphere then is being added by global warming.
95% is probably an impractically large number. In reality, we need lots of cooperating elements in order to solve this problem. We need to immediately curtail the growth of carbon emissions and then work to reduce it. We need to increase the number and capacity of carbon sinks. New trees need to be planted to replace those being lost in South America. We need to understand what effect the regions of the ocean suffering from hypoxia are having on the oceans ability to absorb carbon dioxide. We need to find out what other problems are being caused by the change in the makeup of the atmosphere and work to fix them.
The U.S. is going to have to step up and become a leader in environmental issues again. This could be the most important long term threat the world has ever had to deal with. The U.S. has been one of the largest producers of CO2 pollution. It's only recently that other large countries have been generating more. The U.S. risks becoming the scapegoat for the entire problem and the target of justifiable anger. Our actions here in the U.S. affect everyone in the world.
I hope that the U.S. and other nations find the strength and will to rise above pettiness and cooperate to solve this problem. It certainly can't be done by any one nation alone.
photosynthesis (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:That's just daft! (Score:2)
Well, that's where it came from in the first place...
Re:That's just daft! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:liquid? (Score:4, Informative)
No, global warming is real (Score:5, Informative)
What a rosy view of the future!
Re:No, global warming is real (Score:3, Informative)
Some of the biology is outside my field, but the parts which I can follow (the statistical arguments) seem well done.
Some of this work has been published in Energy and Environment [multi-science.co.uk]. Interestingly, after a ``revise and resubmit'' [uoguelph.ca] at Nature, Nature turned them down, saying the subject was ``too technical''
Re:unless you know... (Score:5, Informative)
NO. 300 gigatons of CO2 cycle through the environment every year. In a closed cycle.
But every year, humans add an extra 6 gigatons to that cycle that was not there the previous year. We do this by taking carbon from deep underground (in the form of oil) and burning it to release that CO2 to the atmosphere.
Natural processes do not change the global CO2 balance, at least not on the short time scales that humans are capable of changing it.