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Message

Carbon Capture
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:02 pm
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:02 pm
What’s the boards opinion on this? Reason I ask, they’re trying to push this onto the parish I live in.
Apparently they’re going to “capture carbon and send it to a well 10,000 feet deep”. Problem with that is, this well will be right below our aquifer.
To make matters worse, the citizens have no say so. Even the land owners who will be having this put underneath them. The government is considering this imminent domain.
Crazy times!
Apparently they’re going to “capture carbon and send it to a well 10,000 feet deep”. Problem with that is, this well will be right below our aquifer.
To make matters worse, the citizens have no say so. Even the land owners who will be having this put underneath them. The government is considering this imminent domain.
Crazy times!
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:04 pm to BayouBengals21
quote:
To make matters worse, the citizens have no say so. Even the land owners who will be having this put underneath them. The
Link?
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:04 pm to BayouBengals21
don't know much about science books
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:06 pm to BayouBengals21
Carbon capture is bullshite. Anthropogenic climate change is a hoax, hence carbon capture. It’s an environmentalist wet dream. Just like the California bullet train.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:07 pm to BayouBengals21
Need info brah. Links etc 
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:08 pm to BayouBengals21
quote:
To make matters worse, the citizens have no say so.
They have to have a hearing before the state mineral board. You will get notice of the hearing if your property is affected.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:09 pm to BayouBengals21
The amount of carbon on Earth is fairly constant. It is transformed from one form to another via the carbon cycle. In the carbon cycle, photosynthetic plants take carbon from air or seawater and convert it into glucose and other organic compounds via the Calvin cycle of photosynthesis. Animals eat some of the biomass and exhale carbon dioxide, returning carbon to the atmosphere.
In other words, it cannot be captured because it is.
In other words, it cannot be captured because it is.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:09 pm to BayouBengals21
If I were a betting man all this "green initiative" will be a thing of the past in a few days.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:10 pm to BayouBengals21
BullSh!t climate change agenda / corporate welfare. Not profitable for companies unless subsidized by federal gov. They have no clue the impact it will have done the road. There’s an example, I need to look for the link… companies did this up north and they spent sh!t tons of money , only to capture ~10% of projected amount, fuking scam!
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:10 pm to BayouBengals21
Tress capture a lot of carbon, but we're cutting them down to put up windmills.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:23 pm to BayouBengals21
quote:
Apparently they’re going to “capture carbon and send it to a well 10,000 feet deep”. Problem with that is, this well will be right below our aquifer.
CO2 aquifer intrusion is not the issue you should be concerned about. Inquire about a pipeline rupture and asks to see how pipeline ruptures are mitigated and the measures the operating company will take upon a pipeline rupture.
CO2 has a molecular weight of 44. Air has a molecular weight of about 28-29. CO2 is heavier than air and sticks to the ground. The danger is that it becomes a potential asphyxiate and your car will not start under high concentrations. If a dense phase CO2 pipeline were near my house I would have a self contained breathing apparatus for me and my family members handy in case of a pipeline emergency with enough capacity to walk out of the plume. But that’s just me.
This post was edited on 1/15/25 at 8:37 pm
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:32 pm to BayouBengals21
CO2 will be separated from your water supply by over 1 mile of rock, it is safe. Even if it could seep up to the water table you will end up with carbonated water on tap.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:38 pm to GumboPot
There are already CO2 pipelines running all over this part of the South. Is OP talking about direct carbon capture out of ambient air, or injecting CO2 emissions from an industrial source or power plant?
If the 45Q tax credits are reduced or removed, IMO, most of the projects to capture and inject CO2 will be shelved.
If the 45Q tax credits are reduced or removed, IMO, most of the projects to capture and inject CO2 will be shelved.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:40 pm to BayouBengals21
It’s relatively safe. By that I mean it’s safer than if there was natural gas in that reservoir and we have that all over the place. A CO2 reservoir is safer than a developed natural gas reservoir because it only has one hole punched in it, not including the monitoring wells around the perimeter.
And if it leaks into your aquifer you guys will be the envy of the world with your sparkling water.
The only threat to worry about with CO2 injection is the escape to atmosphere and filling a low lying area. CO2 is heavier than air. But we don’y have canyons and declivities around here.
And if it leaks into your aquifer you guys will be the envy of the world with your sparkling water.
The only threat to worry about with CO2 injection is the escape to atmosphere and filling a low lying area. CO2 is heavier than air. But we don’y have canyons and declivities around here.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:47 pm to BestBanker
quote:
In other words, it cannot be captured
Carbon gets sequestered deep in the ocean as well as underground. It won’t be there forever, but if we put it there it will remain for thousands of years, maybe millions. The CO2 eventually dissolves into the water.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:49 pm to East Coast Band
“Tress capture a lot of carbon, but we're cutting them down to put up windmills.”
Curious where this is happening.. the windfarms I see are on the coast or ridges along plateaued areas in west Texas where the air currents are at a maximum..
Curious where this is happening.. the windfarms I see are on the coast or ridges along plateaued areas in west Texas where the air currents are at a maximum..
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:53 pm to GumboPot
quote:
If a dense phase CO2 pipeline were near my house I would have a self contained breathing apparatus for me and my family members handy in case of a pipeline emergency with enough capacity to walk out of the plume.
It would have to be very near, or the ground would have to slope downward from the pipeline to the house. But if it’s a quarter of a mile away, you are golden. It’s a much bigger issue in mountainous terrain.
But your post is spot on. The aquifer is not an issue.
And we have been dealing with CO2 pipelines and CO2 injection for many decades. It’s not new; it’s just that before we were doing it to recover hydrcarbons and now. It’s to store the CO2.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:53 pm to East Coast Band
quote:
Tress capture a lot of carbon,
I did the math a few months ago when I found out a carbon capture plant will be 3 miles from my house.
3 square miles of forest gets rid of same amount as a capture plant per year.
Plus, the carbon trees capture gets returned as oxygen. Capture plant shoves that crap underground.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:55 pm to Icansee4miles
quote:
There are already CO2 pipelines running all over this part of the South.
I’m VERY familiar. The main CO2 pipeline system being the Denbury system just purchased by Exxon.
quote:
Is OP talking about direct carbon capture out of ambient air,
Nah. I’m pretty sure I know what project the OP is talking about. The operator is taking CO2 from industrial emitters.
quote:
If the 45Q tax credits are reduced or removed, IMO, most of the projects to capture and inject CO2 will be shelved.
I believe the DOE currently has $1.2 trillion in queue for these projects. Applications for FOAs for that money are very hot and heavy right now.
The new administration with Congress can change this very quickly. In fact Trump mentioned on the campaign trail he would like to reallocate that money for infrastructure projects.
Posted on 1/15/25 at 8:57 pm to BayouBengals21
quote:
Problem with that is, this well will be right below our aquifer.
Enviro-tards say the same thing about fracturing wells.
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