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gobblox38 t1_jd8y3fh wrote

I've seen enough of these to be skeptical of the claim until it's verified by actual scientific research.

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Kitsunebillie t1_jd9em7g wrote

I have a feeling a plant that big doesn't get made before a working small scale prototype.

But who knows. Maybe I'm wrong.

Maybe I'm too stoned to tell.

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gobblox38 t1_jd9jgbn wrote

The plant already exists. In the article, they say that a portion of the plant is being retrofitted.

The biggest red flag for me is the claim that they'll pull co2 out of the air. That'll require a lot of energy just to pull that off. It would be better to get the co2 from a concentrated source such as a smokestack or exhaust pipe. I don't see how their proposed process will result in a net carbon sequestration unless the energy comes from nuclear power or carbonless renewable energy.

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Itsumishi t1_jd9p1xi wrote

It also sounds like the vast bulk of the CO2 reduction comes not from the capture of carbon from the air, but changing the chemical composition of the concrete (using significantly less cement). The downside to their approach is the concrete must be baked on site.

Not to say this is a bad approach, there are plenty of uses for precast concrete, but it also makes this process useless for any concrete which needs to be poured in-situ and allowed to cure (eg footpaths, building slabs, etc.).

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jdb7vrp wrote

It's absolutely a bad approach.

We already have a method of installing CO2 extracting plants that have:

  1. A higher yield in building materials
  2. Produce building material with higher carbon storage capacity
  3. Can pull CO2 out of the air without supplying any power
  4. Require no construction to install

These incredible high efficiency CO2 extracting plants are called trees. Every penny they spent on this plant would have been more productively spent on literal plants.

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Itsumishi t1_jdbdqkj wrote

Do you really think we can replace concrete with timber in all construction?

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AaronDoggers t1_jdbecc1 wrote

If looking at this as purely a way to store CO2 from the atmosphere, trees are a going to be much simpler and cheaper

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Itsumishi t1_jdboy4i wrote

And as a method to significantly reduce the carbon intensity of concrete, the most widely used building material on earth?

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jdd87yb wrote

Carbon neutrality doesn't require every technology to be low carbon so long as you offset the carbon you produce.

Every extra dollar you spend on low carbon concrete would have been better spent buying normal concrete and using the savings to plant trees.

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Itsumishi t1_jdf0n6z wrote

I strongly disagree.

Firstly, I suspect you vastly underestimate how carbon intensive concrete is. We absolutely need to figure out how to drastically reduce the carbon intensity of concrete and/or drastically reduce how much we use of it (almost certainly both). But even if we drastically reduce how much we use its naive to think we can stop using it.

Secondly, carbon offsets can help slow climate change but it can't solve it. Planting trees is great. We should absolutely be reforesting everywhere we can. But a forest is only a useful carbon sink until it gets cut down, or burns in a forest fire at which point almost all the carbon stored in it is released back into the atmosphere. Forests are part of the natural atmospheric carbon lifecycle that is in constant fluctuation.

The idea that we can burn fossil fuels that hold carbon that has been stored in a stable condition for millions of years and offset it by planting a forest which then may be cut down or burnt out in 100 years or a 1000 years is deeply flawed.

But still we need to do it because we need to buy as much time as possible.

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jdfgtri wrote

I think you overestimate how expensive low-carbon concrete is and how much carbon it actually takes to make.

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Itsumishi t1_jdfjx2p wrote

I'll assume you meant "underestimate" regarding the expense, and on that I'd just say new technologies are always expensive. The point of pilots projects etc will be to find methods which can be made cost-effective.

On the "how much carbon it actually takes to make" comment... well its not low-carbon if it takes lots of carbon - so that doesn't make any sense.

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jdgsohi wrote

I meant overestimate how much carbon it removes and underestimate how much it costs to remove carbon from the air.

And its not a new technology that can be improved with iteration - CO2 always takes energy to remove and its other ingredients always take energy to create.

Until we get essentially carbon free and cheap energy there's no excuse to waste it on low carbon concrete when we can use those resources more efficiently elsewhere.

If you're going to waste energy on physically removin CO2 from the air then you're best bet is giving China and India free solar panels rather than using solar panels to remove CO2 to put in concrete

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jdd8iid wrote

I never said we stop using concrete, just that you will reduce carbon in the atmosphere more effectively if you use normal concrete and cheaply plant trees instead of using more expensive low carbon concrete. As an added bonus you get more building material too.

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ncc74656m t1_jdcxa5p wrote

The one thing I can say though is that if they are doing it to sequester carbon from their processes, it might actually be more beneficial than simply planting trees and hoping for the best, especially when the plant in question is located in desert areas.

It depends on how efficient the process is though, because if it's only partial capture, or the concrete suffers in some manner requiring more replacement, etc, then it might not be. But really, we are pretty well way beyond the point of being able to tree our way out of this. We need active sequestration methods and potential active decarbonization of the atmosphere now, and likely still then some weather modification like solar screening via reflective gases or particulate in the atmosphere.

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jddb148 wrote

Your money would be better spent giving india and china free solar cells than this pie in the sky active sequestration shit. That can wait until we actually have cheap and carbon neutral energy to throw at it.

We'd be better off just biting the bullet and going for ocean fertilization or dumping sulfur dioxide in the upper atmosphere if we're that desperate.

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ncc74656m t1_jddfchl wrote

TBH we probably already need the sulfur dioxide. But also, if we're giving away free solar, we should probably work on finishing ours here, too. But of course, we'll never do that either if our pols are still monetarily beholden to the fossil industry.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying this is the solution, or even a good final one. Just that it's something we probably need, and on the heavy assumption that it is being done properly and with enough efficiency, it's a step in the right direction. And of course, seeing that this is in AZ, it's quite reasonable to say it should be solar powered to boot.

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jddftg4 wrote

I think it's a waste of time and money and if we're going for pie in the sky like this we and we might as well throw the money at fusion or something instead since that might give us the energy for us to do something like this in the first place.

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ncc74656m t1_jddhb6x wrote

Fusion is probably a (very) long term solution, and tbh, unless we're also prepared to supply that to the rest of the world, it's not really a fix. Much of places like India, China, Africa, and South America require socioeconomic change too, but the catch is, most of those problems are either enabled or straight up caused by Western capitalism, and capitalism is quite happy with those results thank you much.

So, really, the best we can do is minimize what we're creating, keep planting trees as you say, and try to capture what remains.

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Itsumishi t1_jdf207v wrote

Lower carbon concrete is not remotely as much a pie in the sky proposition as fusion. Not even comparable.

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jdfgym1 wrote

we're talking about sequestering carbon from the air and storing it. Low carbon concrete isn't even carbon neutral.

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Itsumishi t1_jdflgn0 wrote

Sequestering carbon from the air is only a small element in this particular trial (and to be honest I suspect that's a journalistic error).

The bulk of carbon emissions in the manufacture of concrete come from the processes which occur during the creation of cement. There's two elements to this:

  • Current methods of creating cement involve heating limestone and clay to around 1400 degrees Celsius. Its hard to hit these temperatures without large inputs of fossil fuels.
  • The chemical process which occurs within the limestone during this baking releases A LOT of CO2. (This is the most carbon intensive bit).

So to achieve lower carbon intensity, we need new methods of producing concrete that use significantly less cement (which is how this trial aims to achieve the bulk of its CO2 reductions); and/or we can capture some of the CO2 from the limestone and embed the carbon back into the concrete.

Pulling it from the air does seem incredibly inefficient when the concentrations will be much higher in the exhaust and waste gasses than the atmosphere. This is where I think the journalistic error occurs. The article says they'll use the AirCapture technology - but I suspect they'll use that technology within a closed system - not just pulling it from the nearby atmosphere.

And yeah - it still won't be carbon neutral, but a significant reduction in a very carbon intensive process is still better than not doing it.

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jdgszyh wrote

>And yeah - it still won't be carbon neutral, but a significant reduction in a very carbon intensive process is still better than not doing it.

In the absence of superior alternatives which should always be pursued first in order of efficiency.

>Pulling it from the air does seem incredibly inefficient when the concentrations will be much higher in the exhaust and waste gasses than the atmosphere. This is where I think the journalistic error occurs. The article says they'll use the AirCapture technology - but I suspect they'll use that technology within a closed system - not just pulling it from the nearby atmosphere.

And it is incredibly inefficient but as marketing it works - the comments here are proof of it.

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gobblox38 t1_jddbxx1 wrote

Trees are a temporary reservoir that'll hold the carbon for about 50 years +/- a few decades. There's entire regions where trees are dying because the climate has changed too quickly for them to adapt.

The true natural carbon sequester is algae in a high sediment deposition area. If the algae is buried before their bodies decay or are eaten, the carbon can be captured indefinitely. This is the first step in how oil is formed.

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jddf3e9 wrote

Yeah, further up I said we're better off fertilizing the oceans or dumping sulfur dioxide in the upper atmosphere than doing this active sequestration shit when we don't have cheap abundant energy.

You might as well just give china and india free solar panels instead.

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gothling13 t1_jdagipg wrote

I don’t know anything about this particular company, but I did hear about this idea about 10 years ago as a civil engineering student. The idea was meant for concrete companies and involved redirecting the exhaust through this system, not just sucking random air with a vacuum. The concept as it was explained to me was to filter the exhaust through brine. CO2 combines with calcium in the brine to create calcium bicarbonate. I think, that was 10 years ago.

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gobblox38 t1_jddb7ts wrote

It's been a few years since I've studied carbon sequestration as well. It was for my geologic thermodynamics class. And you're close, it's calcite (calcium carbonate, CaCO3), either that or you're correct, lol.

In the article, they discussed capturing exhaust, but they also talked about pulling the carbon gasses directly from the atmosphere. That's the part I'm most skeptical about.

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Tobias_Atwood t1_jddmo8v wrote

We gotta make ot work somehow, though. Even if we 100% stopped production of greenhouse gasses today we're still looming on the edge of climate disaster with the CO2 already in the atmosphere. The normal biological and geological processes that sequester CO2 move too slowly to save us.

We gotta scale that shit up.

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gobblox38 t1_jddqm67 wrote

I agree that we are facing the greatest crisis that humanity has ever faced, and we're sprinting towards that cliff.

I'm all for investing into large scale production of technology that pulls carbon gasses from the air. I just want to be sure this technology works as advertised and results in a net negative of atmospheric carbon. The last time we need to do is scale up something that doesn't work.

There's a lot we can do to mitigate the upcoming climate crisis, but most of the biggest impacts we can make (such as reducing carbon emissions) gas a lot of resistance. I'm not very optimistic that humanity as we know it will survive past this great filter.

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xxxBuzz t1_jdb42mv wrote

Dunno what they pull it from but know people working on a pipeline that will take CO2 from one state and sell it to another to store or some shit to get credits. Apparently it’s BIG business. I

I think that kinda bullshit should immediately end the incentives and just tell them to cut it out. It’s already went from a potential positive thing to another way to exploit dumb shit for ridiculously sums of money.

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tipsyBerbVerb t1_jdbg5qf wrote

Which if you’re going to pull from a smokestack I feel it be way more economical to turn that into graphene

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SnooCauliflowers8455 t1_jdbk6lc wrote

Both carbon capture and sequestration and something like direct air capture are going to be needed to reduce emissions and CO2 concentrations enough to… not die, imho

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gobblox38 t1_jddgbul wrote

There's real scientific research going on with carbon sequestration. It's been a few years since I've studied the practice, but there's major thermodynamic hurdles to overcome. These methods can't be applied just anywhere, the underlying geologic is the primary factor. Carbon gasses can only be shipped so far before the net capture goes to zero.

I don't think direct capture from the air will ever be feasible. The energy requirements alone means that more carbon would be produced than collected. Thermodynamics is harsh.

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SnooCauliflowers8455 t1_jddxm63 wrote

Energy generation doesn’t necessarily produce carbon that’s the whole point of the sustainable energy transition

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gobblox38 t1_jde0oq9 wrote

The vast majority of energy produced in the US is from fossil fuel. After about a decade of heavy investment into renewables, they only make up about 20% of current production.

Granted, we can and should continue investing into renewables. If we want to get serious about getting off fossil fuels, we need to invest in nuclear power.

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SnooCauliflowers8455 t1_jdgfow3 wrote

You’re not familiar with the topic. The sustainable energy transition is well under way. You may only have a mainstream view of the issue which, granted, I don’t really see very nuanced coverage in mainstream news sources, but inside the energy industry, there’s no long term projection that doesn’t account for massive decline of fossil fuel emissions. Nuclear has its own issues. wind and solar have come to dominate renewable energy because of their favorable LCOE. if you’re interested in learning more, you can start with that search term.

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Bowfinger_Intl_Pics t1_jdcebn1 wrote

That’s the problem with that sort of greenwashing; it’s very energy-intensive.

Air-entrained concrete is a thing; helps prevent spalling as a result of ice melter (usually salt.)

But this doesn’t sound terribly practical or large-scale.

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bandanajack t1_jdb3gw3 wrote

I do see a bunch of solar panels

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gobblox38 t1_jdddwse wrote

It's been a while since I've done serious study on this subject, but the process needs a lot of power. The panels in this picture won't be enough.

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destrux125 t1_jdd2d6r wrote

Well, their prototype facility did use flue gasses for the CO2 source and their Alabama facility will also use flue gasses from another industrial facility as the CO2 source.

I don't see why they would bother with direct air capture at that one facility and not use some type of zero emissions power for it.

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gobblox38 t1_jddhcwq wrote

Maybe the reporter just added in the past if direct air capture because:

  1. they didn't understand what the interviewee was talking about.
  2. they thought it sounds cool.
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mark-haus t1_jdugyom wrote

I can't verify their claims in this article but "pulling CO2 from the air" shouldn't be a red flag. You don't need to go direct air capture to do this, it could be as simple as a chemical process to cure the cement in ambient air that reacts to CO2.

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GenBlase t1_jdyyaob wrote

Well.... the curing of any concrete takes co2 out of the air directly. Not sure about this plants claims tho....

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NunWrestling t1_jdabxes wrote

It’s just a way to justify continually pumping CO2 into the atmosphere then actually solving the problem

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Hippiebigbuckle t1_jdbnilt wrote

This is capturing the air that comes directly out of the concrete plant. The production of concrete generates quite a bit of co2 so presumably this is actually solving the problem that making cement previously caused. Potentially anyway, we’ll see how this goes.

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Lesas t1_jdbqqbi wrote

I've had to recently read into CCS systems for Uni and the most common issue i read about with most systems is 1. Whether they're actually able to reduce and store CO2 long term effectively and 2. The amount of energy required to do so (and how much CO2 is needed to produce that energy)

Also without any monetary incentive it is unlikely for someone to build a factory like that, the price for emissions needs to be high enough for it to make sense to build a facility that reduces it (or there needs to be another advantage)

But yes, considering that after Energy and Transportation the Cement industry is one of the leading emitters on a global scale this could be an interesting development

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gobblox38 t1_jdddk09 wrote

I remember hearing that a gas powerplant would have to consume a quarter of the power produced just to capture the carbon gasses. Then the gas would have to be transported to the injection site. I think the best possible scenario, that the injection site is right by the powerplant, the net capture would be about 60%.

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PartyYogurtcloset267 t1_jdbv2f3 wrote

But nobody wants to address the problem. Try to mention reducing consumption on reddit. You'll be downvoted to oblivion. People want large companies to cut emissions without realizing that this would directly impact their ability to buy more shit whenever they feel like. It's always someone else's problem.

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gobblox38 t1_jddd1ck wrote

I wouldn't go that far. I'm sure the people trying this genuinely want to be the ones that contribute to solving the climate crisis. I just don't see how this method will actually work.

I've been watching a scientist work on a possible solution for over a decade now. It involves using sodium in a combustion engine. It sounds like it might help, but I'm not sure how we'd source the sodium without a lot of excess chlorine gas.

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FlameBoi3000 t1_jdaqfey wrote

I've been reading about this for 5+ years at least. No one in the actual construction industry has ever heard of it nor used it.

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jdb6hzo wrote

It's proven science, it just requires space, material, manpower, and energy that makes it either unjustifiably inefficient at best or a net loss. You gotta read the fine print with optimism blindfold.

For instance, if you took all the money that went into funding this project and instead spent it planting trees you'd remove more CO2. Concrete isn't exactly carbon neutral and neither is the energy spent separating or storing CO2.

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gobblox38 t1_jddfiue wrote

Granted, in the five years since I've learned about carbon sequestration methods this might have changed. Yes, it is possible to put CO2 into a superstate and inject it into sandstone or put it in a liquid state and inject it into basalt. There's problems with both and the best possible scenarios have a 60% net carbon capture.

There's a problem with trees that most people don't consider. A tree is a carbon reservoir for less than a century. When the tree dies and decays, that trapped carbon goes right back into the atmosphere. The last time trees captured carbon on a geologic scale was the carboniferous. Fungus have been eating dead trees since then.

Another issue is that climate change is killing entire regions of trees. Even if we could plant trees fast enough and ensure each one lives, we'd never make a dent in atmospheric carbon.

The plant that stores carbon on a geologic scale is algae. The algae has to die, sink to the ocean floor, and be buried before it can be eaten/decay. The problem with this is that it's such a slow process that it only becomes noticeable on a geologic timescale.

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yawaworht-a-sti-sey t1_jddg96o wrote

I wish we had the luxury of worrying about 50 years from now.

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gobblox38 t1_jddi30f wrote

I, for one, welcome our inevitable doom. May the planet go thorough its usual end mass extinction phase and move on to a new era filled with bizarre (to us) creatures that live in dynamic equilibrium. /s

For real though, I too am worried about what the next few decades will bring.

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cbrrydrz t1_jdb0oym wrote

Well, that's carbon capture sequestration you.

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tagoean t1_jdbc39i wrote

Agreed this sounds like at best a drup on a hot plate.

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PartyYogurtcloset267 t1_jdburrp wrote

Plants already exist that pull carbon out of the air. However they're highly inefficient and extremely expensive to run. The headline makes this sound like a startup making big promises to investors while barely having a working model right now. This technology may one day do what it says, but right now it falls very, very short of its promises.

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bob_loblaw-_- t1_jdc6o7n wrote

Plants already exist that pull carbon out of the air. They're highly efficient and cost almost nothing

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balazs955 t1_jdbvcbf wrote

The claim (title) is usually the least of the problems. A bunch of stuff works, just not in a big scaly, environmental friendly and economically worthy way.

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ATLL2112 t1_jdbxu52 wrote

There was just an article in the NYT about an apartment building in NYC that just installed a device that captures the carbon emissions from it's furnace, which then gets shipped out to a concrete company.

I'd assume the NYT wouldn't have run a story like that unless they verified the efficacy of the device. Not to mention it was installed to avoid fines from the city due to the building's emissions, so there's no point in doing that unless you can show to the regulatory body in the city that you are, in fact, reducing emissions.

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gobblox38 t1_jddgts5 wrote

Well, that same news organization ran stories on UFOs.

I'm going to wait for actual scientific research before I buy into this process.

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ATLL2112 t1_jdditla wrote

Uhh, just Google carbon mineralization. It's a process that occurs naturally, but can be done artificially as well. You're acting like there's zero scientific research on this topic when there's actually quite a bit.

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gobblox38 t1_jddjfvk wrote

lol, I studied exactly that for my geologic thermodynamics class. I can tell you about injecting liquid CO2 into basalt and the chemical alterations that occur.

You're making quite a leap with the assumption that I claim there's zero scientific research on this topic. It's the scientific research I'm aware of that makes me skeptical of the direct air capture claims.

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ATLL2112 t1_jddk897 wrote

>I'm going to wait for actual scientific research before I buy into this process.

If you're waiting for "actual" scientific research, is not the implication that there currently is none? Your words there.

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gobblox38 t1_jddl3kt wrote

Please show me the actual scientific research on this particular process. I need to see the research and conclusions on direct air capture before I buy into what sounds pretty extraordinary.

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