大气(单位)
可再生能源
环境科学
比例(比率)
风力发电
化石燃料
碳捕获和储存(时间表)
高原(数学)
温室气体
储能
固碳
气候变化
气象学
二氧化碳
废物管理
工程类
地质学
地理
功率(物理)
海洋学
化学
数学分析
物理
地图学
数学
有机化学
量子力学
电气工程
作者
David Goldberg,Sara Nawaz,James K Lavin,Angela L. Slagle
标识
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.3c03492
摘要
Continued fossil fuel emissions will increase CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere and could require removal of 10 Gt of CO2 per year or more to reach IPCC global climate goals. Large-scale construction of direct air capture (DAC) hubs to scrub CO2 from the atmosphere paired with geological storage is a prominent approach to potentially meet this target. We consider one location for theoretical scale-up of a DAC hub: the Kerguelen plateau in the Southern Indian Ocean which has high-potential renewable energy resources (wind) and large volumes of basalt rock for mineral storage. With consistent wind, previous studies indicate a hub in this location could collect approximately 75 Mt of CO2 annually, with conservative storage resources for 150-300 Mt of CO2 each year. Even with its immense wind and storage potentials, 14 Kerguelen-scale hubs would be needed to capture and store 1 Gt of CO2 per year. This brings into focus the important social, economic, and environmental trade-offs that must be considered in finding an acceptable balance between climate solutions, renewable energy requirements, and nature. Engaging public groups on these trade-off considerations will be crucial for gigaton scale-up of CO2 removal in just and responsible ways.
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