| In my research of the domain I did come across this. It is one of the scariest proposals out there. These people risk causing irreversible damage to the oceans and all life within them. It's hubris to think we can do something like that and actually control it at a planetary scale. Also, refer back to my questions about the energy and resources required to do this, to do anything. While you are right in that the process is not combustion in reverse, the reality of the matter is that it much worse than that. Massively worse. We haven't even gone to the other elephant in the room: Australia. I hope someone eventually publishes an honest accounting of the CO2 that was released into the atmosphere through these fires. My guess is it easily negates decades of clean energy and other mitigation technologies. I didn't get into it in my original comments. There are two questions everyone should ask when looking at the 800,000 year CO2 concentration chart: 1) How/why did CO2 levels rise? 2) How/why did CO2 levels drop? These are fundamental questions anyone with a science background should ask almost immediately. The answers, at a basic level, are simple: 1) Massive continental scale fires burning for thousands of years. Remember, no fire dropping helicopters. 2) Storms, rain, water, hurricanes and, yes, trees and vegetation growing over thousands of years. So, stuff burned for approximately 25,000 years for a 100 ppm increase and stuff grew and rain fell for about 50,000 years to capture the CO2 that was created. The bottom line is that anyone claiming that we can do 1000x better than if humanity left the planet they are going to have to explain, in great detail, how it is that they know Zeus so intimately that he will grant them magical powers. And I don't think this is an understatement at all. BTW, the only intelligent proposal I've seen is to plan trees like our lives depend on it. Seriously. Simple tech. We know how it works. We know what it does. And, if we have the water, we know how to grow them. This won't solve the problem any faster but it is likely to make things better. All we have to do is figure out how to prevent our massive new forests from burning, because, in that cases, once again, we will have made the problem een worse. Here's an article on that one: https://www.livescience.com/65880-planting-trees-fights-clim... |
Enhanced silicate weathering is a way to draw down atmospheric CO2 with less energy than went into creating the problem. Still, perhaps it will never be deployed on a large scale if people find the proposal too scary.
That's one of the most depressing things about curbing climate change. There are a number of changes that we could have implemented to prevent the problem from getting as bad as it is now. But all of them scared enough people that they didn't go forward on a scale that was large enough, fast enough. That could be fear of physical safety (opposition to nuclear power), fear of unemployment (coal miners against cleaner power sources), fear of lost profits (businesses against carbon taxes)...
Since the scale of the problem is vast, the scope and scale of any actual solutions will be vast as well.