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Room Temperature Conversion of CO2 to Coal

nature.com

12 points by mroll 7 years ago · 7 comments

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noetic_techy 7 years ago

Not sure if anyones really considered this, but it bugs me to see future nascent industrial applications that want to pull CO2 out of the air for products. We could very well get ourselves into an even worse situation with too little CO2.

Off the top of my head, if levels were to drop below 120 ppm, we would see mass plant die off. Pre-industrial levels were already around 180 to 200 ppm. So even if we can stabilize right now around 400 ppm with renewables, AND start to sequester back to pre-industrial levels, we would need to also make sure we can turn that sequestration OFF at some point. And what is that point exactly? Optimal ppm CO2 level is actually very debatable. The dirty secret is that plant growth is most optimal around 1200 - 1500 ppm CO2. Likely because plants evolved in epochs of much higher levels. Stabilizing at todays 400 ppm is probably optimal.

We could very well get into a situation in the future where we are begging industry to STOP pulling CO2 out of the atmosphere for fear or crop failure, instead of pumping it out. Industry in China and India that might be outside of our sovereignty. It may take 1000 years, but levels will come down naturally if we can stabilize at 400 ppm. That stability will only come from technological advances like electric cars, planes, trucks and lab grown meats.

  • Wowfunhappy 7 years ago

    > We could very well get ourselves into an even worse situation with too little CO2.

    Given the state of the world right now, this just seems like a very unlikely scenario relative to the reverse of too much carbon.

    I'm not saying we shouldn't consider it per se, but let's prioritize our energy where it matters.

  • yetihehe 7 years ago

    I think if someone really needed that CO2, it would be much cheaper to produce it from currently existing sources than to scrub it from air. That way you can have CO2 AND some energy for further processes.

  • mrollOP 7 years ago

    Yeah, I agree that is something that pretty much is not considered in the public conversation. But it seems like at least having the ability to control CO2 levels is much better than we are now.

yetihehe 7 years ago

Another technology with several uses:

  - Remove CO2 using less energy than other methods
  - Change it into C and CO
  - Make best-class supercapacitors for energy storage from C.
I think more such breakthroughs no one thought of will appear in future, likefamous problem of horse dung on streets of NY (https://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofBritain/Great...)
  • hydrox24 7 years ago

    Such breakthroughs will undoubtedly occur. But we cannot rely on breakthroughs for any particular problem.

    In the case of the horse→car substitution in NY in the late 19th century, the optimal situation was that noone worries too much, and the car is invented, and all is well.

    But they could not have known that it was a horse substitute which would be invented. Imagine if 19th century Londoners, faced with a bulging, over-capacity sewerage system, had rested easy in the knowledge that a breakthrough would sooner or later come along to save them.

    It would have been catastrophic. No such breakthrough occurred and they did need to worry. In reality, they worried enough that they build a whole new system and there was never a crisis.

    We should not make the mistake of hoping that the right technology will come along to fix Global warming.

    Technological process is almost assured. But in any given area we have no idea how much will occur, and how soon.

    • yetihehe 7 years ago

      > We should not make the mistake of hoping that the right technology will come along to fix Global warming.

      If everyone hopes for such technology and no one tries to invent it, as you say, it won't come along.

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