http://www.21school.ox.ac.uk/blog/index.cfm/2008/12/2/Using-the-Oceans-to-Reduce-Atmospheric-CO2-Levels

Using the Oceans to Reduce Atmospheric CO2 Levels
Posted At : December 2, 2008 11:12 AM 
Related Categories: Seminars 
Prof Gideon Henderson, co-Director of the 21st Century Oceans Institute with 
Prof David Marshall, spoke at the School on 27 November about the relationship 
between the oceans, the carbon cycle and climate change. His lecture 
highlighted the work of oceanographers who are using physics and chemistry to 
explore how oceans can be used to absorb the high levels of CO2 humans are 
putting into the atmosphere.

The atmospheric concentrations of CO2 have risen dramatically in the last 300 
years due to human activity, and their greenhouse effect is connected to 
climate change scenarios. Not all CO2 goes into the atmosphere, however. The 
oceans absorb about a third of the carbon pushed into the atmosphere over time. 
2.2 gigatons of carbon go into the oceans every year, although where it is 
absorbed depends on the ocean temperature, biology, and circulation patterns. 
As the oceans absorb more carbon, they become more acidic.

Because the oceans naturally absorb carbon, they have been seen as a way to 
adapt to higher CO2 emissions and avoid extreme scenarios of climate change. 
One proposal has been to store carbon in the deep ocean (most carbon is 
naturally absorbed at the surface). Others have focused on geo-engineering, or 
manipulating natural systems to enhance carbon uptake by the ocean.

The first geoengineering proposal involves dropping iron into areas of the 
ocean. Some parts of the ocean don't absorb much carbon because low iron levels 
limit the amount of life on the ocean surface. Fertilising the oceans with iron 
can promote the growth of life, which will sequester carbon from the 
atmosphere. Some companies have already tried to implement this process to sell 
carbon credits, but they have been prohibited from doing so by international 
law. Not enough is known yet about iron fertilisation, and the Oceans Institute 
is using sophisticated modelling to examine the chemical and biological 
processes involved and their wider implications.

A second proposal is to make the oceans more alkaline to balance the acidity 
resulting from carbon absorption - this would enable the oceans to absorb even 
more carbon from the atmosphere. Adding alkalinity involves producing massive 
volumes of calcite from limestone and dissolving this calcite into the oceans. 
Like the iron fertilisation proposal, not enough is yet known about the impacts 
of this process on a wide scale: What would it do to biota? How can it be mixed 
evenly? How do we engineer the large-scale extraction, processing and dilution 
of limestone/calcite?

Attendees raised several questions about the ethics of implementing 
geoengineering plans without full knowledge of their biological impact. Prof 
Henderson argued that although geoengineering may be inherently unpredictable, 
research is needed to clearly identify possible risks and drawbacks associated 
with a variety of approaches. Although it would naturally be desirable not to 
‘mess' with the oceans, climate change will likely place increasing pressure on 
governments to implement technical solutions. Prof Henderson added, "By the 
time we get to this point we need to be informed by good science."



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