http://theliquidgrid.com/2018/07/22/ocean-storage-of-co2/

Ocean Storage of CO2

BY D. HUME <http://theliquidgrid.com/author/fishshalamigmail-com/> ·
PUBLISHED JULY 22, 2018 · UPDATED JULY 24, 2018

Some ocean scientists are advocating for storing captured CO2 emissions in
the deep ocean. The reasons why might surprise you.  In this post I’ll
investigate why some think ocean storage of CO2 is a good idea and the
potential impacts it could have on the marine environment.

How to Stop Climate Change

Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a naturally occurring gas that plants and algae
rely on for photosynthesis, and we rely on them for the oxygen we breathe.
Ever since the Industrial Revolution we’ve been ejecting increasingly
larger amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere, leading to a warmer planet and
acidification of the ocean. No bueno for everyone on planet Earth.

If we want to mitigate climate change, there’s a very simple solution: we
need to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.  One
strategy to rapidly decarbonize and reduce CO2 emissions is through
adoption of renewable energy and improved energy efficiency, but this is
not enough.  Even if we somehow managed to magically stop emitting CO2 today,
there is still a tremendous amount in the atmosphere that will contribute
to climate change for centuries to come.  In addition to decarbonization we
need to remove excess CO2 from the atmosphere.
Carbon Capture and Storage

Our planet has natural carbon sinks that do this already: terrestrial
plants, soil, and marine algae for example. The oceans are actually one of
the largest sinks on the planet, absorbing roughly 25 percent of the
atmospheric CO2 we emit each year [1].  But these natural processes take
time and can’t keep up with our current level of emissions.  Evidence to
this fact is in the numbers: global atmospheric CO2 concentration in 1960
was 317 part per million (ppm), by 1990 was 354 ppm, by 2010 it was 390
ppm, and today it is 408 ppm [10].
[image: co2 concentration growth]

Atmospheric CO2 concentrations are at their highest levels ever. Source:
NOAA Climate.gov



Nature needs help.  We need to pull CO2 out of the atmosphere and store it
away.  This idea of capturing CO2 from the air and then transporting and
storing it in a manmade ‘sink’ that is separated from the atmosphere is
referred to as carbon capture and sequestration (or storage), known as
CCS.  There are many different tools and methods being researched to
capture and transport carbon, but I won’t focus on those here.   In this
post I want to focus on CO2 sequestration, not in tanks or underground, but
in the ocean.
Ocean Storage of CO2

It seems counter-intuitive: the oceans are turning more acidic due to too
much CO2 and we want to put *more *CO2 in there? It’s a controversial idea,
but there are some who think that it makes logical sense.  To be clear,
this is not a solution to climate change, but perhaps a way to avoid the
worst of it.  Let’s take a look.

Storage is required to isolate captured CO2 from the atmosphere.
Traditional storage techniques trap captured CO2 as a liquid or gas deep
underground in specific geological features (such as abandoned hydrocarbon
wells) and require a non-porous plug to seal the injection hole and prevent
release. With ocean storage of CO2, the gas is intentionally injected into
the deep ocean and is either allowed to diffuse or be trapped in a specific
location, depending on the depth and pressure.

There are three general methods that could be used to directly inject
carbon dioxide into the ocean for storage.  First, would be a pipe that
runs from shore to the ocean depths.  This pipe would receive a stream of
carbon dioxide from a capture or intermediary storage facility on the coast
and then direct it offshore for long-term storage. In the dispersal by ship
method, CO2 stored on board the vessel would be ejected at great depths
using a long hose or pipe towed behind the vessel, promoting rapid
diffusion of the CO2 into seawater. The third method would be to use a
stationary vessel or platform to inject CO2 to a fixed location at or near
the ocean bottom.


[image: Ocean storage co2]

Different methods of injection for ocean storage of CO2. Source: IPCC
(Artwork courtesy Sean Goddard, University of Exeter)



The way in which CO2 is stored in the ocean depends on its phase state and
the depth at which it is injected.  Remember, pressure increases with depth
and we can use this fact to our advantage when it comes to ocean storage.
Depending on pressure and temperature, carbon dioxide can exist as a gas,
liquid, solid, or solid hydrate (a cage of water molecules encircles each CO
2 molecule). From the ocean surface to depths of about 500-meters CO2 would
exist as a gas and would tend to rise in the water column, since it is less
dense than seawater.  Between 500-meters and 2,700-meters CO2 would exist
as a liquid, but one that is still lighter than seawater and would thus
also rise in the water column. At depths up to 2,700-meters CO2 will create
a rising plume and dissolve into the surrounding seawater relatively
quickly.

At depths deeper than 3,000-meters the weight of the water column
compresses the liquid CO2 and it becomes denser than seawater and sinks
slowly to the seafloor.  As a solid (or as a hydrate at depths below
400-meters) it will also sink, but will dissolve as it descends in the
water column. Once the carbon dioxide sinks to the seafloor it forms an
underwater pool at the bottom of the ocean, trapped in place by its own
density.


[image: brine lakes]

Brine Lakes at the bottom of the sea. This is similar to what CO2 lakes
would look like. Photo courtesy of NOAA
The Benefits of Time and Space

Carbon dioxide is naturally stored in the ocean through chemical processes,
either as a dissolved gas or, over a longer time scale, as carbonate
sediments on the seafloor.  In fact, more than 70 percent of current
CO2 emissions
will eventually wind-up in the ocean [9].  Before the Industrial Revolution
the CO2 exchange rate between the ocean and the atmosphere were pretty well
balanced, but ever since we began emitting CO2the ocean has been trying to
catch-up with the atmosphere.  If and when our CO2 emissions ever level off
it will take the atmosphere and oceans several centuries to reach
equilibrium.  However, this leaves tremendous amounts of CO2 in the
atmosphere and upper-ocean (where it is most damaging) for hundreds of
years.  Storage of CO2 in the ocean accelerates this natural storage
process.  It transports CO2 from the atmosphere to the deep ocean, where it
will eventually wind-up anyways, and do less harm.
[image: carbon cycle]

The carbon cycle simplified. Source: “Oceanography 6th Ed.” by Tom Garrison

The effectiveness of ocean storage of CO2 depends on how long the stored CO
2 remains isolated from the atmosphere.  Ocean currents carry surface
waters to the deep and vice versa.  This mixing effect is more pronounced
near the surface and generally decreases with depth.  For seawater in the
deep reaches, it can take between 300 to 1000 years for seawater to go
through a complete turnover [4].   If our goal is to keep stored CO2 separated
from the atmosphere as long as possible, then deeper is better.  According
to models, if the storage site is below 3,000-meters the fraction of CO2 that
might reach the atmosphere is expected to be 20 percent over 200 years.

Model simulations depicting the fraction of CO2 retained in ocean storage
at different depths over time. Storage at deeper depths stays isolated from
the atmosphere for longer. Source: IPCC [4]
Another perceived advantage of ocean storage is capacity and availability.
We’ve been pretty prolific with drilling holes in the ground to extract
hydrocarbons. Once an oil well is emptied it might be repurposed as an
underground CO­2 storage reservoir, but this depends on the geology.
According to the International Energy Agency’s Greenhouse Gas R&D Programme
the world’s hydrocarbon reservoirs have a combined storage capacity of
roughly 800 gigatonnes of CO2(GtCO2)[5].  To put this number in
perspective, the world’s annual CO2emissions are currently around 36
GtCO2­ [6].
In other words, terrestrial storage could handle about 22 years worth of
emissions at our current levels.

Climate change experts often refer to what is called our “carbon budget”.
This is the amount of carbon that we can emit into the atmosphere without
causing a two-degree Celsius temperature change.  It’s perhaps one of the
most important metrics to monitor since it will impact live on Earth for at
least the next century.  The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) helps monitor this budget and they have placed our total budget of
carbon emissions at approximately one trillion tons.  From 1860 to 2011 we
emitted an estimated 515 billion tons of carbon, which left around 500
billion tons left in our budget eight years ago.  Fast forward to today:
estimates place us at values ranging from 250 to 485 billion tons remaining
before we exceed our budget and catastrophically damage the earth.  If our
current annual emissions stay constant at 36 GtCO2­ (9.8 Gt Carbon), that
means we have about 25 to 50 years left before we reach the tipping
point. Terrestrial storage does not have enough capacity if we continue
with business as usual.

The ocean covers more than 70 percent of the planet, and roughly
three-quarters of it has a depth of greater than 3,000-meters (the magic
depth where storage becomes more effective).  This opens up a vast amount
of potential storage sites in the deep ocean. Estimates of the capacity of
ocean storage range from 4,000 GtCO2 to 10,000 GtCO2 [4][9]. This is almost
thirteen times the storage potential of hydrocarbon reservoirs, or about
250 years worth of storage at our current emission rate.  Ocean storage of
CO2 could buy us more time with our carbon budget and help us avoid peak
concentrations of atmospheric CO2, perhaps avoiding the worst of climate
change.

Earth’s surface area is mostly covered by water. Source: IPCC
Is the Juice Worth the Squeeze?

Ocean storage of CO2 is not without environmental risks and consequences.
There is the obvious issue of ocean acidification.  The ocean has
historically been slightly basic, averaging a pH around 8.2, though this
value varies with depth.  Due to the CO2 emissions over the last two
centuries, the average pH has dropped 0.1 units [4][7].  While this may
seem small, remember that the pH-scale is logarithmic, so this seemingly
tiny change is actually a 30 percent decrease.  Intentional storage may
cause commensurate changes in the ocean’s pH, though it is hard to say for
certain.  By one calculation, adding 2,000 GtCO2 (about 50 years-worth of
current emissions) via intentional storage could have a similar affect as
our last two hundred years, dropping the average ocean pH another 0.1 units
[9].  More CO2 in the ocean will almost certainly lead to a lower pH, the
question is where in the water column and by how much.

A sharp decrease in pH creates havoc for marine creatures. Carbon dioxide
in seawater leads not only to the formation of carbonic acid (which drives
acidification), but also to usurping of carbonate ions from marine
organisms such as lobsters, phytoplankton, and corals. These organisms rely
on carbonate ions to form their exoskeletons and shells that are crucial to
their survival. Some of these animals form the foundation of the marine
food web; their collapse could have dire consequences.
[image: ocean acid lobster]

Marine organisms, like this Hawaiian Lobster, will have difficulty building
their exoskeleton in more acidic waters. Source: Huffington Post

The deep ocean is not well understood.  According to NOAA, 80 percent the
ocean floor remains unmapped, unobserved, and unexplored [8].  What
deep-sea organisms and marine ecosystems are down there waiting to be
discovered is anyone’s guess.  Of course, without knowing what’s down there
it’s impossible to know the environmental impacts due to high
concentrations of CO2.  We need a better understanding of these unique
ecosystems before ocean storage of CO2 is seriously considered.

There have been a handful of experiments in the past to assess the
environmental impact of ocean storage of CO2, but the few proposed in-ocean
tests faced harsh public criticism forcing their abandonment [2].  This
strong negative perception makes it difficult to conduct any experiments
and understand the potential impacts.  This means that most of the research
on CO2 ocean storage is model based, but as the old adage goes: all models
are wrong, but some are more useful than others.  Our models make many
assumptions about deep ocean circulation, mixing, and chemical properties
which all need to be verified.



Ocean storage of CO2 requires choosing the lesser of two evils. The ocean
is going to absorb the majority of our CO2 emissions over the coming
centuries anyways, but in the process the atmosphere and ocean surface
waters will be subjected to unprecedented warming and acidification.  On
the other hand, vast quantities of CO2 could be isolated in the deep sea,
driving down atmospheric and ocean surface concentrations in the short
term. This could help stabilize the climate. The cost would be untold
damage to sensitive deep-sea ecosystems that we know very little about.
It’s an uncomfortable choice, but it’s one that we may have to seriously
consider as our carbon budget steadily dwindles.

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