Canada’s Homer-Dixon talked about ‘sequestration’ in his Foreign Exchange
interview, and that prompted me to search around to learn what that meant
other than legal sequestration. Then I noticed an item about terra preta,
black earth, an ancient Amazon practice of burning slash under the soil that
vastly enriches it. Top Green Tech Ideas
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/010507A.shtml
<http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/010507A.shtml>

That led me to this 1 page PDF by Ron Larson on the potential of making
carbon burning a positive for climate change.
http://www.solartoday.org/2006/nov_dec06/Chairs_CornerND06.pdf
<http://www.solartoday.org/2006/nov_dec06/Chairs_CornerND06.pdf>

We cannot invent our way out of the pending environmental resource crises,
although we should be inventing as fast as we can (ie., Manhattan Projects)
and selling or sharing that technology especially with China and India, to
mitigate their growing pains on global climate. However, we must prepare to
conserve on a national and individual basis and adjust society as we have
known it with the end of cheap fossil fuels. Homer-Dixon, and others, argue
this can be a positive opportunity.

Coal in a Nice Shade of Green
By Thomas Homer-Dixon and S. Julio Friedmann, New York Times, March, 25,
2005

Thomas Homer-Dixon is director of the Center for Peace and Conflict Studies
at the University of Toronto. S. Julio Friedmann directs the carbon
sequestration project at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in
Livermore, Calif.
WHEN it comes to energy, we are trapped between a rock and several hard
places. The world's soaring demand for oil is pushing against the limits of
production, lifting the price of crude nearly 90% in the last 18 months.
Congress's vote in favor of drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
won't make much difference because the amount of oil there, at best, is tiny
relative to global or even American needs. And relief isn't likely to come
anytime soon from drilling elsewhere: oil companies spent $8 billion on
exploration in 2003, but discovered only $4 billion of commercially useful
oil.
Sadly, most alternatives to conventional oil can't give us the immense
amount of energy we need without damaging our environment, jeopardizing our
national security or bankrupting us. The obvious alternatives are other
fossil fuels: natural gas and oil products derived from tar sands, oil shale
and even coal. But natural gas supplies are tightening, at least in North
America.
And, of course, all fossil fuels have a major disadvantage: burning them
releases carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that may contribute to climate
change. This drawback is especially acute for tar sands, oil shale and coal,
which, joule for joule, release far more carbon dioxide than either
conventional oil or natural gas.
As for energy sources not based on carbon, it would be enormously hard to
meet a major percentage of America's energy needs at a reasonable cost, at
least in the near term. Take nuclear power - a source that produces no
greenhouse emissions. Even assuming we can find a place to dispose of
nuclear waste and deal with the security risks, to meet the expected growth
in total American energy demand over the next 50 years would require
building 1,200 new nuclear power plants in addition to the current 104 - or
one plant every two weeks until 2050.
Solar power? To satisfy its current electricity demand using today's
technology, the United States would need 10 billion square meters of
photovoltaic panels; this would cost $5 trillion, or nearly half the
country's annual gross domestic product.
How about hydrogen? To replace just America's surface transportation with
cars and trucks running on fuel cells powered by hydrogen, America would
have to produce 230,000 tons of the gas - or enough to fill 13,000
Hindenburg dirigibles - every day. This could be generated by electrolyzing
water, but to do so America would have to nearly double its electricity
output, and generating this extra power with carbon-free renewable energy
would mean covering an area the size of Massachusetts with solar panels or
of New York State with windmills.
Of course technology is always improving, and down the road some or all of
these technologies may become more feasible. But for the near term, there is
no silver bullet. The scale and complexity of American energy consumption
are such that the country needs to look at many different solutions
simultaneously. On the demand side, this means huge investments in
conservation and energy efficiency - two areas that policy makers and
consumers have sadly neglected.
On the supply side, the important thing is to come up with so-called bridge
technologies that can power our cities, factories and cars with fewer
emissions than traditional fossil fuels while we move to clean energy like
solar, wind and safe nuclear power. A prime example of a bridge technology -
one that exists right now - is gasification.
Here's how it works: in a type of power plant called an integrated
gasification combined-cycle facility, we change any fossil fuel, including
coal, into a superhot gas that is rich in hydrogen - and in the process
strip out pollutants like sulfur and mercury. As in a traditional combustion
power plant, the heat generates large amounts of electricity; but in this
case, the gas byproducts can be pure streams of hydrogen and carbon dioxide.
This matters for several reasons. The hydrogen produced could be used as a
transportation fuel. Equally important, the harmful carbon dioxide waste is
in a form that can be pumped deep underground and stored, theoretically for
millions of years, in old oil and gas fields or saline aquifers. This
process is called geologic storage, or carbon sequestration, and recent
field demonstrations in Canada and Norway have shown it can work and work
safely.
The marriage of gasified coal plants and geologic storage could allow us to
build power plants that produce vast amounts of energy with virtually no
carbon dioxide emissions in the air. The Department of Energy is pursuing
plans to build such a zero-emission power plant and is encouraging energy
companies to come up with proposals of their own. The United States, Britain
and Germany are also collaborating to build such plants in China and India
as part of an effort by the Group of 8. Moreover, these plants are very
flexible: although coal is the most obvious fuel source, they could burn
almost any organic material, including waste cornhusks and woodchips.
This is an emerging technology, so inevitably there are hurdles. For
example, we need a crash program of research to find out which geological
formations best lock up the carbon dioxide for the longest time, followed by
global geological surveys to locate these formations and determine their
capacity. Also, coal mining is dangerous and strip-mining, of course,
devastates the environment; if we are to mine a lot more coal in the future
we will want more environmentally friendly methods.
On balance, though, this combination of technologies is probably among the
best ways to provide the energy needed by modern societies - including
populous, energy-hungry and coal-rich societies like China and India -
without wrecking the global climate.
Fossil fuels, especially petroleum, powered the industrialization of today's
rich countries and they still drive the world economy. But within the
lifetimes of our grandchildren, the age of petroleum will wane. The
combination of gasified coal plants and geologic storage can be our bridge
to the clean energy - derived from renewable resources like solar and wind
power and perhaps nuclear fusion - of the 22nd century and beyond.
http://www.homerdixon.com/articles/20050325-nytimes-coalgreen.html
<http://www.homerdixon.com/articles/20050325-nytimes-coalgreen.html>

ALSO SEE
The Upside of Down by T. Homer-Dixon
[C]onverging stresses could cause a catastrophic breakdown of national and
global order — a social earthquake that could hurt billions of people. But
he shows that this outcome isn't inevitable; there's much we can do to
prevent it. And after setting out a general theory of the growth, breakdown,
and renewal of societies, he shows that less severe types of breakdown could
open up extraordinary opportunities for creative, bold reform of our
societies.

Homer-Dixon contends that 5 "tectonic stresses" are accumulating deep
underneath the surface of today's global order:
*      energy stress, especially from increasing scarcity of conventional
oil;
*      economic stress from greater global economic instability and widening
income gaps between rich and poor;
*      demographic stress from differentials in population growth rates
between rich and poor societies and from expansion of megacities in poor
societies;
*      environmental stress from worsening damage to land, water forests,
and fisheries; and,
*      climate stress from changes in the composition of Earth's atmosphere.
Read more of the book’s argument here http://www.theupsideofdown.com/
<http://www.theupsideofdown.com/>

Check out 25x25 Vision: By 2025, America's farms, forests and ranches will
provide 25% of the total energy consumed in the US, while continuing to
produce safe, abundant, and affordable food, feed and fiber.
http://www.25x25.org/ <http://www.25x25.org/>

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