Australians to store CO2 underground
MELBOURNE, Apr 9, 2007 -- UPI
Australian scientists are pushing ahead with plans to store thousands of tons of carbon dioxide in an underground reservoir. A spokesman for the Cooperative Research Centre for Greenhouse Gas Technologies, which is behind the $25 million project, said the natural sandstone and clay sediment in the area provides the perfect environment to store large amounts of carbon dioxide. Peter Cook told the Australian Broadcasting Corp that, while there are risks involved, he was confident of the project's success. "This is probably the most advanced project of its type in the world in terms of technologies we're musing to monitor how the carbon dioxide moves and how it reacts with rocks," he said. Critics of geosequestration have questioned the safety and stability of the carbon dioxide once it is in the ground, specifically the possibility of leaks or an eruption. |