How burying CO2 in sea can slow warming
Seabed Storage
Safe As Carbon Will Stay Down
Advances are taking place in clean energy, transport
and efficiency that may have rightfully been considered miraculous a decade
ago. But here’s the catch: As fast as everything is proceeding, it’s still not
fast enough.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) reported last
year that a critical technology — capturing carbon dioxide emissions from
generators and either burying or otherwise disposing of them — isn’t expanding
fast enough. The IEA reported that current “carbon capture and storage” (CCS)
facilities are capable of handling just 7.5% of the emissions that the world
will need eliminated every year by 2025. That’s necessary if nations are to
meet the goal of keeping any increase in global warming below 2 degrees
Celsius.
In China, researchers have been looking for ways to
accelerate CCS. They decided to look out to sea.
On land, CCS isn’t just promising in principle — it’s
been shown to work. There will be more than 20 large-scale capture facilities
available by the end of the year, according to the Global CCS Institute. But
there’s still concern about making sure the CO2, once buried, stays buried. The
same can be said for the idea China has about burying CO2 at sea. For firms and
countries to exploit the vastness of the ocean floor, they also need some kind
of confidence that it’ll stay there.
By studying the long-term interactions of major
physical forces in “unconsolidated marine sediment” such as loose silt, clay
and other permeable stuff below the sea floor, researchers Yihua Teng and
Dongxiao Zhang report that extreme conditions at the bottom of the ocean
essentially hold CO2 in place, “which makes this option a safe storage”.
Under great pressure and low temperature, CO2 and
water trapped in the sediment below the sea floor crystallise into a stable ice
called hydrate. The new paper on CCS demonstrates through simulation that the
hydrates become an impermeable “cap” that keeps the CO2 below it from migrating
back up to the sea floor.
The research appears this week in the journal
‘Science Advances’. The study should provide some confidence that ocean CO2
storage remains a viable tool in the push to reduce emissions of the most
dangerous heat-trapping gas, even as commercialisation of the process remains
way off.
The big assumption is that there’s no telling what
the Earth’s living geology will do over the centuries. Fractures in the subsea
sediment, either preexisting or created by tectonics or CO2 injection, could
open a pathway for CO2 to escape — though significant uncertainty remains.
BLOOMBERG
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