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OKIsItJustMe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-06-10 05:45 PM
Original message
Scientists Target East Coast Rocks for CO2 Storage
Edited on Wed Jan-06-10 05:58 PM by OKIsItJustMe
http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/news-events/scientists-target-east-coast-rocks-co2-storage
January 4, 2010

Scientists Target East Coast Rocks for CO2 Storage

Power Plants Might Pipe Emissions Under Seabed

Scientists say buried volcanic rocks along the heavily populated coasts of New York, New Jersey and New England, as well as further south, might be ideal reservoirs to lock away carbon dioxide emitted by power plants and other industrial sources. A study this week in the http://www.pnas.org/">Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences outlines formations on land as well as offshore, where scientists from http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/">Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory say the best potential sites may lie.

Underground burial, or sequestration, of globe-warming carbon dioxide is the subject of increasing study across the country. But up till now, http://www.nyserda.org/programs/environment/EMEP/Geological_Sequestration_projects.asp">research in New York has focused on inland sites where plants might send power-plant emissions into shale, a sedimentary rock that underlies much of the state. Similarly, a http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/18/business/energy-environment/18clean.html?_r=1&scp=2&sq=kurt%20zenz%20house&st=cse">proposed coal-fired plant in Linden, N.J. would pump liquefied CO2 offshore into sedimentary sandstone. The idea is controversial because of fears that CO2 might leak. By contrast, the new study targets basalt, an igneous rock, which the scientists say has significant advantages.

Some basalt on land is already well known and highly visible. The vertical cliffs of the Palisades, along the west bank of the Hudson River near Manhattan, are pure basalt, and the rocks, formed some 200 million years ago, extend into the hills of central New Jersey. Similar masses are found in central Connecticut. Previous http://www.earthsky.org/interviewpost/energy/juerg-matter-on-icelands-new-carbon-storage-project">research by Lamont scientists and others shows that carbon dioxide injected into basalt undergoes natural chemical reactions that will eventually turn it into a solid mineral resembling limestone. If the process were made to work on a large scale, this would help obviate the danger of leaks.

The study's authors, led by geophysicist David S. Goldberg, used existing research to outline more possible basalt underwater, including four areas of more than 1,000 square kilometers each, off northern New Jersey, Long Island and Massachusetts. A smaller patch appears to lie more or less under the beach of New Jersey's Sandy Hook, peninsula, opposite New York's harbor and not far from the proposed plant in Linden. The undersea formations are inferred from seismic and gravity measurements. "We would need to drill them to see where we're at," said Goldberg. "But we could potentially do deep burial here. The coast makes sense. That's where people are. That's where power plants are needed. And by going offshore, you can reduce risks." Goldberg and his colleagues previously identified http://www.earth.columbia.edu/articles/view/2204">similar formations off the U.S. Northwest.

Goldberg said the undersea formations are potentially most useful, for several reasons. For one, they are deeper—an important factor, since CO2 pressurized into a liquid would have to be placed at least 2,500 feet below the surface for natural pressure to keep it from reverting to a gas and potentially then making its way back to the surface. The basalts on land are relatively shallow, but those at sea are covered not only by water, but hundreds or thousands of feet of sediment, and appear to extend far below the seabed. In addition to providing pressure, sediments on top would form impermeable caps, said Goldberg. The basalts are thought to contain porous, rubbly layers with plenty of interstices where CO2 could fit, simply by displacing seawater. On land, by contrast, there are concerns that drilling and injection could disturb aquifers or otherwise get in the way of neighbors. The scientists estimate that just the small Sandy Hook basin may contain about seven cubic kilometers of the rock, with enough pore space to hold close to a billion tons of CO2—the equivalent of the emissions from four 1-billion-watt coal-fired plants over 40 years.

"The basalt itself is very reactive, and in the end, you make limestone," said coauthor http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/user/dvk">Dennis Kent, who is also at Rutgers University. "It's the ultimate repository."

Previous research has identified other areas of basalt sprinkled along the Appalachians. The largest mass of all appears to extend offshore of Georgia and South Carolina, as well as inland. This coast also is populous, and would make a good target, said Goldberg. "The next step would be to get some exploratory surveying and drilling going," he said. The paper suggests a half-dozen spots around New York including the Sandy Hook area, and three off South Carolina, to start with.

The study was also coauthored by geologist and paleontologist Paul Olsen, who has participated in drilling the basalt inland in New Jersey.
# # #

The paper, "CO2 Sequestration in central atlantic magmatic province basalts: Potential on-shore and off-shore reservoirs" is available from the authors or the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences press office: PNASNews@nas.org, 202-334-1310.


http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1073/pnas.0913721107

Potential on-shore and off-shore reservoirs for CO2 sequestration in Central Atlantic magmatic province basalts

David S. Goldberga, Dennis V. Kenta,b,1, and Paul E. Olsena

aLamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, 61 Route 9W, Palisades, NY 10964; and bEarth and Planetary Sciences, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854.

Contributed by Dennis V. Kent, November 30, 2009 (sent for review October 16, 2009)

Identifying locations for secure sequestration of CO2 in geological formations is one of our most pressing global scientific problems. Injection into basalt formations provides unique and significant advantages over other potential geological storage options, including large potential storage volumes and permanent fixation of carbon by mineralization. The Central Atlantic Magmatic Province basalt flows along the eastern seaboard of the United States may provide large and secure storage reservoirs both onshore and offshore. Sites in the South Georgia basin, the New York Bight basin, and the Sandy Hook basin offer promising basalt-hosted reservoirs with considerable potential for CO2 sequestration due to their proximity to major metropolitan centers, and thus to large industrial sources for CO2. Onshore sites are suggested for cost-effective characterization studies of these reservoirs, although offshore sites may offer larger potential capacity and additional long-term advantages for safe and secure CO2 sequestration.

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NNadir Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-06-10 11:41 PM
Response to Original message
1. Actually, I don't want to store the anti-nukes' dangerous fossil fuel waste in my backyard.
Edited on Wed Jan-06-10 11:42 PM by NNadir
They have no way of proving, the anti-nukes, that they can store their dangerous fossil fuel waste for eternity.

I note that dangerous fossil fuel waste does not have a half-life - it is eternal - and is thus not subject to a bateman equilibrium.

How come right after 5 or 6 decades of announcing - sort of like the two millenium announcement of the impending return of Jesus - that solar will save us, most anti-nukes end up talking about dangerous fossil fuel waste dumps?

Is it just that they don't really believe the horseshit they hand out day after day, week after week, decade after decade?
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