This article is rather disinformative with its use of semi-science
terminology which is simplified to the point of being wrong

On Sun, 27 Nov 2011, Sally Lerner wrote:

> Sounds good all ways, but I'll be looking for the impact assessments...  Sally
> ________________________________________
> From: Portside Moderator [[email protected]]
> Sent: Friday, November 25, 2011 8:39 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: The Coming Green Wave: Ocean Farming
> 
> The Coming Green Wave: Ocean Farming to Fight Climate Change
> 
> by Brendan Smith
> November 23, 2011
> http://www.theatlantic.com/life/archive/2011/11/the-coming-green-wave-ocean-farming-to-fight-climate-change/248750/
> 
>      Seaweed farms have the capacity to grow huge
>      amounts of nutrient-rich food, and oysters can act
>      as an efficient carbon and nitrogen sink

[...]

> Oysters also absorb carbon, but their real talent is
> filtering nitrogen out of the water column. Nitrogen is
> the greenhouse gas you don't pay attention to -- it is
> nearly 300 times as potent[9] as carbon dioxide, and
> according to the journal Nature[11], the second worst in
> terms of having already exceeded a maximum "planetary
> boundary[12]."

Yipes. If this were true, life might never have started, or have
been roasted out, as on Venus, billions of years ago. After all, 
nitrogen is 80% of the atmosphere. Let's see how this nonsense came 
about. Reference 9:

 
http://www.csmonitor.com/Environment/Living-Green/2010/0113/Earth-s-growing-nitrogen-threat

Ah. in this article, we learn that the 300x CO2 factor belongs 
to N2O, nitrous oxide, not nitrogen at all. Extraordinarily sloppy
writing, obviously a techno-illiterate. But there's more...


 Like carbon, nitrogen is an essential
> part of life -- plants, animals, and bacteria all need
> it to survive -- but too much has a devastating effect
> on our land and ocean ecosystems.
> 
> The main nitrogen polluter is agricultural fertilizer
> runoff. All told, the production of synthetic
> fertilizers and pesticides contributes more than one
> trillion pounds of greenhouse gas emissions to the
> atmosphere globally each year. That's the same amount of
> emissions that are generated by 88 million passenger
> cars each year.
> 
> Much of this nitrogen from fertilizers ends up in our
> oceans, where nitrogen is now 50 percent above normal
> levels. According to the journal Science, excess
> nitrogen "depletes essential oxygen levels in the water
> and has significant effects on climate, food production,
> and ecosystems all over the world."

OK, first we have "greenhouse gas" implicitly conflated as
"nitrogen", which is patent nonsense. And then we have 
immediately following, "nitrogen" levels 50% above normal 
in sea water, and depleting oxygen. Again, with nitrogen 
at 80% of the atmosphere, the surface layers of the sea 
must be saturated with N2 already, so this makes no sense, 
but this sounds like a dire change. Well, obviously, the 
nitrogen-containing pollutants from fertilizer runoff are
nitrates and nitrites, not nitrogen at all. Conflating the 
two is like raising alarms after confusing the chloride in 
sea salt with chlorine gas. Pity the poor chemically naive 
reader trying to get a handle on these issues after reading 
this befuddlement. And it doesn't stop there.

> Oysters to the rescue. One oyster filters 30-50 gallons
> of water a day -- and in the process filters nitrogen
> out of the water column.

That would be a good trick, if it were possible, but of course 
it isn't. The N2 levels in sea water are unaffected by mollusc 
metabolism. Again, it is nitrates which are being mislabelled 
here.

With this level of error in the fundamental science, I am
led to doubt pretty much everything else this guy has written 
in this article, as I don't have time to go through and fact
check all the rest of his text.

 -Pete

_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to