Assessing ocean alkalinity for carbon sequestration

<p>Over the coming century humanity may need to find reservoirs to store several trillions of tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted from fossil fuel combustion, which would otherwise cause dangerous climate change if it were left in the atmosphere. Carbon storage in the ocean as bicarbonate ion...

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Main Authors: Renforth, P, Henderson, G
Format: Journal article
Published: Wiley 2017
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author Renforth, P
Henderson, G
author_facet Renforth, P
Henderson, G
author_sort Renforth, P
collection OXFORD
description <p>Over the coming century humanity may need to find reservoirs to store several trillions of tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted from fossil fuel combustion, which would otherwise cause dangerous climate change if it were left in the atmosphere. Carbon storage in the ocean as bicarbonate ions (by increasing ocean alkalinity) has received very little attention. Yet, recent work suggests sufficient capacity to sequester copious quantities of CO2. It may be possible to sequester hundreds of billions to trillions of tonnes of C without surpassing post-industrial average carbonate saturation states in the surface ocean. When globally distributed, the impact of elevated alkalinity is potentially small, and may help ameliorate the effects of ocean acidification. However, the local impact around addition sites may be more acute but is specific to the mineral and technology.</p> <br/> <p>The alkalinity of the ocean increases naturally because of rock weathering in which &gt; 1.5 moles of carbon are removed from the atmosphere for every mole of magnesium or calcium dissolved from silicate minerals (e.g., wollastonite, olivine, anorthite), and 0.5 moles for carbonate minerals (e.g., calcite, dolomite). These processes are responsible for naturally sequestering 0.5 billion of CO2 tons per year. Alkalinity is reduced in the ocean through carbonate mineral precipitation, which is almost exclusively formed from biological activity. Most of the previous work on the biological response to changes in carbonate chemistry have focused on acidifying conditions. More research is required to understand carbonate precipitation at elevated alkalinity to constrain the longevity of carbon storage.</p> <br/> <p>A range of technologies have been proposed to increase ocean alkalinity (accelerated weathering of limestone, enhanced weathering, electrochemical promoted weathering, ocean liming), the cost of which may be comparable to alternative carbon sequestration proposals (e.g., $20 - 100 tCO2-1). There are still many unanswered technical, environmental, social, and ethical questions, but the scale of the carbon sequestration challenge warrants research to address these.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:1df60727-9b65-4290-849b-db2991a969a52022-03-26T11:13:48ZAssessing ocean alkalinity for carbon sequestrationJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:1df60727-9b65-4290-849b-db2991a969a5Symplectic Elements at OxfordWiley2017Renforth, PHenderson, G<p>Over the coming century humanity may need to find reservoirs to store several trillions of tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted from fossil fuel combustion, which would otherwise cause dangerous climate change if it were left in the atmosphere. Carbon storage in the ocean as bicarbonate ions (by increasing ocean alkalinity) has received very little attention. Yet, recent work suggests sufficient capacity to sequester copious quantities of CO2. It may be possible to sequester hundreds of billions to trillions of tonnes of C without surpassing post-industrial average carbonate saturation states in the surface ocean. When globally distributed, the impact of elevated alkalinity is potentially small, and may help ameliorate the effects of ocean acidification. However, the local impact around addition sites may be more acute but is specific to the mineral and technology.</p> <br/> <p>The alkalinity of the ocean increases naturally because of rock weathering in which &gt; 1.5 moles of carbon are removed from the atmosphere for every mole of magnesium or calcium dissolved from silicate minerals (e.g., wollastonite, olivine, anorthite), and 0.5 moles for carbonate minerals (e.g., calcite, dolomite). These processes are responsible for naturally sequestering 0.5 billion of CO2 tons per year. Alkalinity is reduced in the ocean through carbonate mineral precipitation, which is almost exclusively formed from biological activity. Most of the previous work on the biological response to changes in carbonate chemistry have focused on acidifying conditions. More research is required to understand carbonate precipitation at elevated alkalinity to constrain the longevity of carbon storage.</p> <br/> <p>A range of technologies have been proposed to increase ocean alkalinity (accelerated weathering of limestone, enhanced weathering, electrochemical promoted weathering, ocean liming), the cost of which may be comparable to alternative carbon sequestration proposals (e.g., $20 - 100 tCO2-1). There are still many unanswered technical, environmental, social, and ethical questions, but the scale of the carbon sequestration challenge warrants research to address these.</p>
spellingShingle Renforth, P
Henderson, G
Assessing ocean alkalinity for carbon sequestration
title Assessing ocean alkalinity for carbon sequestration
title_full Assessing ocean alkalinity for carbon sequestration
title_fullStr Assessing ocean alkalinity for carbon sequestration
title_full_unstemmed Assessing ocean alkalinity for carbon sequestration
title_short Assessing ocean alkalinity for carbon sequestration
title_sort assessing ocean alkalinity for carbon sequestration
work_keys_str_mv AT renforthp assessingoceanalkalinityforcarbonsequestration
AT hendersong assessingoceanalkalinityforcarbonsequestration