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New process may help offset emissions by storing billions of tons of CO2 in rock mongabay.com November 3, 2008
With concerns over climate change rising, the search is on for ways to safely sequester atmospheric carbon dioxide. A solution could help avoid the worst effects of global warming while offering lucrative returns for its inventors. Fittingly Peter B. Kelemen and Jürg Matter of Columbia University have filed for a patent on a technique that could potentially store billions of tons of CO2 in exposed peridotite, the dominant rock of the upper part of the Earth's mantle, by accelerating a natural 'carbonation' process.
"In situ carbonation of peridotite could consume >1 billion tons of CO2 per year in Oman alone, affording a low-cost, safe, and permanent method to capture and store atmospheric CO2," write the authors. Kelemen and Matter base their projections on the discovery that carbonate veins in mantle peridotite in Oman have an average carbon-14 age of26,000 years, rather than the 30–95 million years old previously believed, showing that atmospheric CO2 can be rapidly converted to solid carbonate minerals via peridotite weathering. Peter B. Kelemen and Jürg Matter. In situ carbonation of peridotite for CO2 storage. PNAS Early Edition Nov 3, 2008 News index | RSS | News Feed Advertisements: Organic Apparel from Patagonia | Insect-repelling clothing |
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