2006 APS April Meeting
Saturday–Tuesday, April 22–25, 2006;
Dallas, TX
Session W5: Abrupt Climate Change Scenario
10:30 AM–12:15 PM,
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
Hyatt Regency Dallas
Room: Pegasus B
Sponsoring
Unit:
FPS
Chair: Tina Kaarsberg, U.S. Department of Energy
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.APR.W5.1
Abstract: W5.00001 : Negative Emissions Technology
10:30 AM–11:05 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Danny Day
(EPRIDA)
Although `negative emissions' of carbon dioxide need not, in principle,
involve use of biological processes to draw carbon out of the atmosphere,
such `agricultural' sequestration' is the only known way to remove carbon
from the atmosphere on time scales comparable to the time scale for
anthropogenic increases in carbon emissions. In order to maintain the
`negative emissions' the biomass must be used in such a way that the
resulting carbon dioxide is separated and permanently sequestered. Two
options for sequestration are in the topsoil and via geologic carbon
sequestration. The former has multiple benefits, but the latter also is
needed. Thus, although geologic carbon sequestration is viewed skeptically
by some environmentalists as simply a way to keep using fossil fuels---it
may be a key part of reversing accelerating climate forcing if rapid climate
change is beginning to occur. I will first review the general approach of
agricultural sequestration combined with use of resulting biofuels in a way
that permits carbon separation and then geologic sequestration as a negative
emissions technology. Then I discuss the process that is the focus of my
company---the EPRIDA cycle. If deployed at a sufficiently large scale, it
could reverse the increase in CO2 concentrations. I also estimate of
benefits --carbon and other---of large scale deployment of negative
emissions technologies. For example, using the EPRIDA cycle by planting and
soil sequestering carbon in an area abut In 3X the size of Texas would
remove the amount of carbon that is being accumulated worldwide each year.
In addition to the atmospheric carbon removal, the EPRIDA approach also
counters the depletion of carbon in the soil---increasing topsoil and its
fertility; reduces the excess nitrogen in the water by eliminating the need
for ammonium nitrate fertilizer and reduces fossil fuel reliance by
providing biofuel and avoiding natural gas based fertilizer production.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.APR.W5.1