Catching
Greenhouse Gases
Scientists Seek Ways
to Lessen Global Warming
Most
scientists agree that global warming is a problem. The U.S. government
is studying carbon sequestration: the disposal of carbon dioxide after
it's produced, rather than cutting down greenhouse gases in the first place.
(NASA/AP Photo)
y Malcolm Ritter
The Associated Press
May
1— You’ve heard plenty about how
a buildup of carbon dioxide in the air is promoting global warming, and
how industry might be told to cut back its emissions.
But have you
heard about stuffing the gas in the ocean? How about piping it into oil
fields, coal seams or deep deposits of briny water?
That’s called carbon sequestration:
disposing of carbon dioxide after it’s produced, rather than trying to
hold down the production in the first place. It’s not a new idea, although
it hasn’t gotten much public attention in the United States.
Possible Long-Term
Strategy
Lately, however, interest in sequestration has been growing.
The Energy Department is spending some $29 million to study it this year,
more than twice last year’s total, and it has asked for 50 percent more
next year. Secretary Bill Richardson added sequestration to his climate-change
strategy last summer.
“Look at the really long term
— 30, 50 or 70 years into the future,” Richardson said. “Carbon sequestration
could offer one of the best options for reducing the buildup of greenhouse
gases, not only in this country but in China, India and elsewhere.”
Both China and India have coal
reserves that could produce lots of carbon dioxide if burned without controls.
Developing nations are being asked to limit their future greenhouse gas
emissions as they expand their economies.
The future of carbon sequestration
should interest anybody who pays for electricity. Power plants produce
about one-third of this country’s manmade carbon dioxide emissions. The
costs of extracting carbon dioxide from smokestack gases — a big technical
challenge — and transporting the gas to a final resting place would make
electricity more expensive.
The Energy Department hopes
to find technologies that cost $10 per ton of stored carbon, which might
add 2 percent to 5 percent to consumer electric bills.
What About
Conservation?
Nobody is talking about abandoning the better-known prescriptions
for cutting back on carbon dioxide: Use energy more efficiently so power
plants and vehicles needn’t burn so much coal and gasoline, and put more
emphasis on alternative energy sources.
But the world might also need
the carbon-storage approach to reach greenhouse gas goals, researchers
say, and it’s time to start studying it.
The wide-ranging menu of approaches
includes some that might become useful within 10 to 15 years, and others
that would take longer, says Doug Carter, who directs the Office of Planning
and Environmental Analysis in the Energy Department.
The nearer-term strategies can
help pay for themselves by producing a useful product, he said.
Here are some of the strategies
under study:
Oil fields:
Injecting carbon dioxide into
oil fields could help get oil out. In the porous earth where oil reserves
lie, the gas would make isolated globs of oil swell and connect and also
make the liquid thinner. Both would help shoo the oil toward recovery wells.
Oil workers already inject carbon
dioxide underground to help oil recovery, but they focus on getting the
most oil for the least carbon dioxide. For gas storage, “we’d want to completely
flip that around,” said Sally Benson, a researcher at the Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory. Current industry know-how would give a start on developing
this approach, she said.
Coal seams:
A good shot of carbon dioxide
might produce a benefit from coal seams that are too deep to mine. Molecules
of methane cling to coal, but carbon dioxide bumps them off and takes their
place. So injecting the greenhouse gas might turn these useless seams into
sources of natural gas. The idea is under study.
The soil:
Plants snatch carbon dioxide
from the air and transport some of the carbon to their roots, providing
a natural underground storage. So campaigns to plant trees or save or replace
forests, for example, promote that process as well as providing an ecological
payoff.
Deep underground:
Some strategies are more like
going to the dump. The only payoff is the disposal.
Natural Deposits
Exist
In the North Sea, off Norway, workers extract carbon
dioxide from the natural gas they produce. Then, instead of letting it
escape into the air, they inject it into porous sandstone some 3,000 feet
below the floor of the ocean. They have been doing this since 1996, and
avoiding Norway’s tax on carbon dioxide emissions.
On land, scientists are thinking
about pumping carbon dioxide into deep deposits of briny water, more than
2,000 feet down, which are useless for drinking water. The deposits would
have to be encased by rock that wouldn’t let the gas escape. Natural carbon
dioxide deposits have remained underground for eons — a good indication
that pumped gas could remain trapped basically forever, Benson said.
Injection into briny deposits
may eventually become a favorite strategy in the United States, Benson
said, because such deposits are so widespread across the country. So gas
from smokestacks wouldn’t have to be transported very far before it’s stored.
However, research into this option is still in its infancy in the United
States.
Ocean Storage
A Dangerous Idea?
The ocean:
This is the most controversial
of the carbon-storage proposals.
One approach is to pipe liquid
carbon dioxide to depths below about 3,300 feet.
At some depths it would remain
a liquid and dissolve. If injected very deep, it would end up on the ocean
floor as ice-like chunks, the result of a chemical reaction with the water.
That would keep the carbon dioxide locked up for an unknown length of time
before it dissolved.
The potential of the ocean to
absorb the gas is immense. Since the mid-1700s, atmospheric concentrations
of carbon dioxide have risen about 30 percent; if you took all the gas
needed to fully double the old level and stuck it in the ocean, it would
raise the ocean’s concentration by only 2 percent.
But what would ocean disposal
mean for underwater life?
“I think it’s a very dangerous
idea,” said Dan Lashof, a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense
Council, an advocacy group. “The environmental risks associated with large-scale
ocean disposal have not been assessed really at all.”
Lashof said he doesn’t reject
the general idea of carbon sequestration, but “ocean disposal is probably
the last place I’d look for it to be successful.”
Carbon dioxide changes the pH
of seawater, making it more acidic. Scientists say they don’t yet know
how the pH change from large-scale disposal would affect ocean life.
Experimentation
in Hawaii
Next year, an international team of researchers plans
to dangle a steel pipeline an inch or two in diameter from a barge off
the Kona coast of Hawaii. They want to see what happens when they dribble
liquid carbon dioxide into the ocean about a half-mile deep. Where does
the carbon dioxide go? What happens to the pH in the area?
Scientists will look for an
effect on ocean life, but the experiment will probably be too brief and
small-scale to cause any disturbance, said Howard Herzog of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, one of the project’s planners.
If large-scale injection became
a reality, about one-fifth of the injected amount would eventually return
to the atmosphere, Herzog said. But that would take several centuries to
1,000 years.
By then, the world will almost
certainly have left fossil fuels and their carbon dioxide emissions behind.
With luck, the gas seeping out of the ocean would be just a ghostly breath
of history. |