APS March Meeting 2013
Volume 58, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 18–22, 2013;
Baltimore, Maryland
Session A38: Focus Session: Instrumentation and Measurement Science for a Sustainable Energy Future
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Monday, March 18, 2013
Room: 347
Sponsoring
Unit:
GIMS
Chair: Eric Palm, National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Tallahassee
Abstract ID: BAPS.2013.MAR.A38.1
Abstract: A38.00001 : Our Sustainable Earth
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
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Abstract
Author:
Raymond L. Orbach
(The University of Texas at Austin)
Recent evidence demonstrates that the Earth has been warming monotonically
since 1980. Transient to equilibrium temperature changes take centuries to
develop, as the upper levels of the ocean are slow to respond to atmospheric
temperature changes. Atmospheric CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$ concentrations, from ice
core and observatory measurements, display consistent increases from
historical averages, beginning in about 1880. They can be associated with
the use of coal ecause of the spread of the industrial revolution from Great
Britain to the European continent and beyond. The climactic consequence of
this human-dominated increase in atmospheric CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$ has been
suggested to define a geologic epoch, termed the ``Anthropocene.'' This
could be a short term, relatively minor change in global climate, or an
extreme deviation that lasts for thousands of years. In order to stabilize
global temperatures, sharp reductions in CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$ emissions are
required: an 80{\%} reduction beginning in 2050. U.S. emissions have
declined sharply recently because of market conditions leading to the
substitution of natural gas for coal for electricity generation. Whether
this is the best use for this resource may be questioned, but it
nevertheless reduces CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$ production by 67{\%} from a
coal-fired power plant, well on the way to the 80{\%} reduction required for
global temperature stabilization. Current methods for CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$
capture and storage are not cost effective, and have been slow (if not
absent) to introduce at scale. This paper describes research into some
potentially economically feasible approaches: cost-effective capture and
storage of CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$ from injection of flue gas into subterranean
methane-saturated aquifers at the surface; fuels from sunlight without
CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$ production; and large-scale electrical energy storage for
intermittent (and even constant) electricity generating sources.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2013.MAR.A38.1