http://www.adn.com/print/article/20141025/alaska-scientist-suggests-storing-carbon-dioxide-polar-ice-blunt-warming

""I'm a little nervous about it, but I want to present it," he said."

I'd say the nervous part is justified. Anyway, should be a rollicking good time 
at AGU, though disappointed that the CDR session was demoted to a poster 
session, while SRM gets full exposure. - Greg

Ned Rozell
October 25, 2014


FAIRBANKS -- Jim Beget spends much of his time digging for clues from long ago, 
like when a volcanic island might have collapsed into the sea, sending giant 
waves to distant shores. He will soon engage in debate on a contemporary 
question: Before carbon dioxide makes Earth unlivable, what can we do about it?

In December, the University of Alaska Fairbanks geologist-volcanologist will 
tack a poster in a San Francisco meeting hall amid the crashing surf of a 
thousand conversations. To educated passersby at the fall meeting of the 
American Geophysical Union<http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2014/> [1], he will 
explain his idea of capturing a greenhouse gas and raining it out over the 
coldest place on Earth.

"I'm a little nervous about it, but I want to present it," he said.

Geoengineering ideas

Beget's idea is an example of geoengineering -- using manmade solutions to 
reduce carbon dioxide levels in the 30-mile shell of gases around Earth. 
Accelerating levels of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere is a frequent topic 
at the conference. Al Gore and climate scientist James 
Hansen<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hansen> [2] have spoken with urgency 
on the subject in lecture halls packed with more people than live in most 
Alaska towns.

With geoengineering, humans attempt to modify the effects of planet-warming 
molecules in the atmosphere. The ideas, most still in the think-tank stage, 
range from painting roofs white to reflect sunlight to seeding the atmosphere 
with volcanic-emission-like particles known to cause global cooling. Another 
way to tackle the problem is to suck carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Some 
have suggested dumping iron filings in the ocean to stimulate the growth of 
CO2-consuming plankton.

As he pondered these notions, Beget's northern bias came through.

"There really hasn't been any suggestion of using the cryosphere (the frozen 
parts of the planet) to store CO2," he said.

Never thawed

He thought the great plateau of East Antarctica, home of the South Pole. There 
sits an ice sheet as large as the Lower 48. At its thickest, the ice is 15,000 
feet (nearly 3 miles) above the ocean. Upon that ice in 1983, Russians at the 
Vostok Research 
Station<http://www.weather.com/news/weather-winter/coldest-temperatures-seven-continents-20131211>
 [3] recorded a temperature of minus 128.6 Fahrenheit. Ice cores show no 
evidence of temperatures close to the thawing mark.

"There's no melt in the record, which goes back 200,000 years," Beget said. 
"It's a natural place for this concept."

To get the carbon dioxide out of the air and down to the ice sheet, Beget 
proposes seeding the air over central Antarctica with monoethanolamine, a 
compound industry workers use to capture carbon dioxide before it exits 
smokestacks. Snowfalls would bury the crystals infused with carbon dioxide 
until the high-altitude parts of the ice sheet touch the sea or otherwise thaw. 
That would buy some time, Beget said.

"According to the physics and ice-flow models, you have a couple hundred 
thousand years."

Beget admits that both the manufacture of 
monoethanolamine<http://www.basf.com/group/corporate/us/en/brand/MONOETHANOLAMINE>
 [4] and the transport of it to Antarctica are carbon-emitting activities, but 
he says other compounds with less of a footprint might be substituted. He knows 
that executing a perfect solution to excess carbon dioxide is not realistic.

'I'm worried'

The quiet, thoughtful professor is striding into a contentious arena because 
has not before heard anyone suggest Earth's freezer as a place to store CO2. 
And because it's time.

"Frankly, I'm worried about global warming. I'm worried about climate change. 
I'd like to suggest something that might help."

Ned Rozell is a science writer with the Geophysical Institute at the University 
of Alaska Fairbanks. Used with permission.

________________________________
Source URL: 
http://www.adn.com/article/20141025/alaska-scientist-suggests-storing-carbon-dioxide-polar-ice-blunt-warming

Links:
[1] http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2014/
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hansen
[3] 
http://www.weather.com/news/weather-winter/coldest-temperatures-seven-continents-20131211
[4] http://www.basf.com/group/corporate/us/en/brand/MONOETHANOLAMINE

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to