Scientists in Iceland have succeeded in turning carbon
dioxide into stone in a span of months by pumping it deep underground,
facilitating a new way of storing the greenhouse gas to deal with climate
change.
The pioneering experiment mixed CO2 emissions with water and
pumped it hundreds of meters underground into volcanic basalt rock — where it
swiftly turned solid, according to an article in the US-based journal Science.
According to the report, carbon dioxide is a key factor in global
warming, and experts have long urged innovative ways for “carbon capture and
storage,” or CCS, solutions.
Earlier attempts to inject CO2 into sandstone soils or deep
saline aquifers have faced difficulties, as they relied on capping rocks to
hold the gas down, prompting fears that it could ultimately leak.
However, the Carbfix project at Iceland’s Hellisheidi plant
— the world’s largest geothermal facility, which powers Reykjavik — sought to
solidify the CO2 instead.
The plant produces 40,000 tons of CO2 per year, just five
percent of the emissions of a similarly-sized coal plant, though still
significant.
In 2012, scientists began pumping 250 tons of CO2 mixed with
water underground.
The project has been expanded as encouraged by the success,
and project handlers will be burying some 10,000 tons of CO2 each year starting
this summer, according to Edda Aradottir, who heads the project for Reykjavik
Energy.
“In the future, we could think of using this [method] for
power plants in places where there’s a lot of basalt, and there are many such
places,” said the study’s co-author Martin Stute, a hydrologist at Columbia
University’s Earth Observatory.
Basalt makes up most of the world’s seafloors and nearly 10
percent of continental rocks, according to the study’s researchers.
No comments:
Post a Comment