Itsumishi
Itsumishi t1_je48xgt wrote
Reply to comment by SpinCharm in Amateur gold digger finds huge nugget worth $160,000 in Australia by dbunkapp
This guy was apparently using a cheap detector and the nugget just happened to be less than 30cm below the surface.
Seems like he mostly just got incredibly lucky!
Itsumishi t1_jdt4mx6 wrote
Reply to comment by Usfamilyman67 in Top lawyers defy bar to declare they will not prosecute peaceful climate protesters by je97
Peaceful has nothing to do with disruptive though. Disruptive is literally the point of a protest. If its not disruptive it isn't a protest.
People standing on footpaths/roads with signs: disrupting pedestrians/traffic.
Boycotting a company: disrupting sales.
Standing outside a building chanting: disrupting people's access to employment or generally being noisy and disrupting their work.
Itsumishi t1_jdkcin3 wrote
Reply to comment by Uondene in Top lawyers defy bar to declare they will not prosecute peaceful climate protesters by je97
Which one of those issues pose an existential threat to humankind?
Itsumishi t1_jdkbg9z wrote
Reply to comment by Usfamilyman67 in Top lawyers defy bar to declare they will not prosecute peaceful climate protesters by je97
Disruptive describes literally every type of protest. Peaceful or otherwise.
Itsumishi t1_jdflgn0 wrote
Reply to comment by yawaworht-a-sti-sey in An Arizona plant will pull CO2 from the air and trap it in concrete by captainquirk
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.
Itsumishi t1_jdfjx2p wrote
Reply to comment by yawaworht-a-sti-sey in An Arizona plant will pull CO2 from the air and trap it in concrete by captainquirk
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.
Itsumishi t1_jdf207v wrote
Reply to comment by yawaworht-a-sti-sey in An Arizona plant will pull CO2 from the air and trap it in concrete by captainquirk
Lower carbon concrete is not remotely as much a pie in the sky proposition as fusion. Not even comparable.
Itsumishi t1_jdf0n6z wrote
Reply to comment by yawaworht-a-sti-sey in An Arizona plant will pull CO2 from the air and trap it in concrete by captainquirk
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.
Itsumishi t1_jdboy4i wrote
Reply to comment by AaronDoggers in An Arizona plant will pull CO2 from the air and trap it in concrete by captainquirk
And as a method to significantly reduce the carbon intensity of concrete, the most widely used building material on earth?
Itsumishi t1_jdbdqkj wrote
Reply to comment by yawaworht-a-sti-sey in An Arizona plant will pull CO2 from the air and trap it in concrete by captainquirk
Do you really think we can replace concrete with timber in all construction?
Itsumishi t1_jd9p1xi wrote
Reply to comment by gobblox38 in An Arizona plant will pull CO2 from the air and trap it in concrete by captainquirk
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.).
Itsumishi t1_jd2q8j6 wrote
Reply to comment by Aalnius in Cyclists Now Outnumber Motorists In City Of London by JackarooDeva
Lol. Sure it is.
Itsumishi t1_je49en0 wrote
Reply to comment by ghunt81 in Amateur gold digger finds huge nugget worth $160,000 in Australia by dbunkapp
Mate you'll never fit in a Schooner, need at least a Pint probably a jug.