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Underwater rocks could be used for massive carbon storage
Source: ENN, Date: , 2010
Considering it is unlikely that global carbon emissions will start
dropping anytime soon, researchers are beginning to look at other
methods to combat climate change. One of these is to hook polluting
power plants up to massive carbon sinks where instead of the carbon
going into the atmosphere it would be stored away in rocks. The process
is known as carbon capture and sequestration or CCS.
Researchers writing in the
Proceedings of National Academy of Science (PNAS) have announced a
number of locations in the East Coast of the United States that appear
prime for CCS. The potential sites—off Long Island, Massachusetts, and
northern New Jersey—are deep under the sea bed in basalt rock, which
researchers say has many advantages over other rocks, such as sandstone. The biggest concern with such sequestration methods is leakage of CO2,
but researchers say that these sites should largely mitigate that risk.
Not only are tthe sites deep underwater, but they are also covered over
by hundreds to thousands of feet of sediment, both barriers to leakage.
The gas would be pumped into the basalt, filling in the rock's gaps by
displacing sea water.
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