Could This Be The Answer To The Greenhouse Gas Problem?
By Jim • May 9th, 2008 • Category: Latest Green News
Turn greenhouse gases to stone? Transform them into a treacle-like liquid deep under the seabed?
The ideas may sound like far-fetched schemes from an alchemist’s notebook but scientists are pursuing them as many countries prepare to bury captured greenhouse gases in coming years as part of the fight against global warming.
Analysts say the search for a suitable technology could become a $150 billion-plus market. But a big worry is that gases may leak from badly chosen underground sites, perhaps jolted open by an earthquake.
Such leaks could be deadly and would stoke climate change.
Part of the answer could be to petrify or liquefy gases like carbon dioxide — emitted for example from power plants and factories run on coal, oil or natural gas — if technical hurdles can be overcome and costs are not too high.
“If you can convert (the gases) to stone, and it’s environmentally benign and permanent, then that’s better,” said Juerg Matter, a German scientist at Columbia University in New York who is working on a project in Iceland to turn carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, to rock.
In theory, carbon dioxide reacts with porous basalt and turns into a mineral, but no one knows how long that takes. Matter and U.S., French and Icelandic experts plan to inject 50,000 tonnes of the gas into basalt in a test starting in 2009.
Other researchers say pumping the gas into sediments below the seabed at depths of around 3,000 meters (9,800 ft) would expose it to enough pressure to turn it into a viscous liquid, like honey or treacle.
“High pressure combined with low temperature results in liquid carbon dioxide that can in some cases be denser than sea water,” said Kurt Zenz House, of Harvard University.
In the worst known example of a leak, a natural volcanic eruption of carbon dioxide from Lake Nyos in Cameroon in 1986 killed more than 1,700 people. Carbon dioxide is not toxic but can cause asphyxia in high concentrations.
Jim is a full time video games journalist/geek, and the recent birth of his son has made him rethink his entire attitude regarding the environment and the future of the planet. Jim is MYG's resident news hound, so if you have a story please drop him an email.
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