Interesting how easy it is to get funding for CDR when fossil fuel extraction 
is 
involved.  - G
Dept. of Energy extracts hydrocarbons from sea, sequesters CO2 in Davy Jones' 
locker
By John Timmer | Published about 19 hours ago
Today, the US Department of Energy announced it had successfully completed a 
test project that extracted a usable fuel (methane) from its resting place in 
ocean sediments. The test, performed in conjunction with ConocoPhillips and a 
Japanese team, could potentially point the way toward a vast new supply of 
energy. And by linking the extraction with carbon sequestration, the DOE might 
have found a way to add more hydrocarbons to the world's energy budget without 
exacerbating climate change.

The material in question is methane hydrates (also called clathrates). These 
form at high pressure in water, which forms a cage-like structure around 
pockets 
of methane. Although these remain solid even above the freezing point of water, 
changes in pressure and temperature can melt them, releasing methane and 
returning the water to a liquid state. Clathrate deposits are estimated to be 
massive. If they can be extracted successfully, they would add a significant 
boost to the world's hydrocarbon reserves.

The recently completed project, which took place off the coast of Alaska, is a 
test to determine if we can do that. The extraction technique involves lowering 
the pressure at the site of the deposit, allowing the methane to escape. At the 
same time, liquid CO2 was pumped in to occupy the space that held the 
clathrate. 
At the pressures prevalent at the site, the CO2 should remain liquid, held 
under 
the sediments that once trapped the methane.

There are some big questions that will require followup work—does the process 
release methane that escapes into the atmosphere? Does the CO2 remain in place 
long enough that we can consider it sequestered? To get answers to those 
questions, the DOE has allocated another $6.5 million to further tests, and is 
requesting $5 million in next year's budget.

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