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Background: What to do about CO2
By Sheri Gagnon
Carbon is one of the basic building blocks of life. It cycles through land, air and water
in everything from the food we eat to the fossil fuels we burn. The natural cycle is in
equilibrium, but humans are now producing unprecedented amounts of its gaseous form, carbon
dioxide (CO2), which is throwing the carbon cycle out of balance and contributing
to climate change. The push is on to decrease our CO2 emissions and find other
technological solutions to the problem.
Of all the proposed solutions, carbon capture and storage (CCS) is quickly becoming one
of the most promising. By capturing CO2 at its source, such as coal-fired power
plants, and injecting it deep in the Earth, it will remain
stored in perpetuity under stable bedrock. Because CO2 can be lethal at high concentrations,
some are concerned with the safety of storing it underground and the potential for leaks,
but experiments that show its stability are making CCS a viable solution for saving the environment
and the economy.
Power generation from the combustion of fossil fuels spews out nearly a third of all global
CO2 emissions. Retrofitting power plants to capture CO2 is a costly
proposition, but political will could help transform our current fossil fuel usage into a
future of zero-emission industries. Most importantly, CCS offers an opportunity for the Earth
to regain its natural carbon balance.
One of the biggest CCS projects in the world his happening right here in Canada. In this
edition, and in the January/February issue of Canadian Geographic, we delve further
into the Weyburn-Midale CCS project in Weyburn, Sask., and see what it could mean for mitigating
climate change.
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