Integrating Energy Production
and Use
with
Greenhouse Gas Management:
Science and Technology
Development
Many anticipate
that the Kyoto Protocol to control greenhouse gas emissions will not be
implemented. Russia seems reluctant and her ratification is needed to satisfy
the conditions of implementation. General interest in climate change and
greenhouse gas management will wane for a while. Scientific work on climate
change will continue. Our society will continue to need and use energy. Those of
us who reason that climate change is, or may become, an important issue will
need to retrench.
Life on earth
depends on the cycling of carbon and energy. Plants take carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere, lakes and oceans to manufacture their food using water and energy
from light. Plants, and animals, use that carbon carrying food as an energy
source. Lifeless carbon bearing material from plants and animals is incorporated
into the soil, oceans, fossil fuel and other carbon reservoirs or “sinks”.
Humans have learned how to recover fossil fuels. We are recycling them by
burning them in power plants, planes, trains, and automobiles to release carbon
dioxide and water vapor to the atmosphere. Their carbon content is thus returned
to the cycle of life. The whole complex process is driven by flows of energy.
The presentation
reviews the carbon cycle from an engineers point of view. Potential future
human modifications to the cycle through science and technology to manage
atmospheric greenhouse gas are considered. Examples include greenhouse gas free
energy, sequestration of carbon dioxide from coal, hydrogen production, and soil
carbon enhancement with charcoal or black carbon. The review suggests that humans will
likely need to ingeniously exploit even more energy to integrate energy use with
control of atmospheric greenhouse gases. The
presentation is provided as a slide show with notes. (DRP 04/05/08)
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