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Friday, June 23, 2006

Coal

An interesting op-ed on the pros and cons (mostly cons) of coal and its technologies, in the NY Times: Our Black Future by Jeff Goodell.

One interesting sidebit: while I know carbon sequestration had the potential to leak CO2 and threaten life, I didn't realize it had already once happened:
In 1986, at Lake Nyos in Cameroon, 300,000 tons of naturally occurring carbon dioxide that had been trapped in the lake suddenly rose to the surface and formed a misty cloud, suffocating 1,700 people.

1 comment:

  1. Anonymous4:15 AM

    After the big disaster in Nyos people have been trying to siphon off CO2 so it doesn't repeat. (It is continously being added from volcanic activity below the lake). I saw a documentary and the pictures were dramatic. There were so much CO2 solved in the water at the bottom that as it rose and the pressure decreased it relaeased, if I recall correcly, 9 liters of CO2 for every liter of water.

    Unfortunately the same lake also threatens to cause a more conventional disaster. It is locate high on a mountain and one side is a fairly thin, crumbling wall of rock that could collapse, causing a gigantic flooding in the area below.

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