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Mixing up those units, or any units, shows ignorance, disdain or malice. One might as well talk of a well that is 15 minutes deep, or of a temperature of 17 inches. Physics nuts (Snezzy waves hand) have little patience with writers who cannot even get the units of measurement straight. The usual confusions, also a tell-tale for bad science, are "watts of energy" and "watts per hour."
Don't even talk to me about this until there is ethanol left over after converting some back into the electricity to power the reaction OR a solar cell is found that is efficient enough that we don't have to cover Arizona with them to have a net impact on the amount of global CO2 .... and then we can have the discussion as to whether we couldn't do better simply by letting the forests that once covered North America and the Amazon basin grow again.
Here's this kid's question - Is the Venusian atmosphere a product of runaway greenhouse gas emissions, or is it a primordial atmosphere waiting for the infusion of a durable conversion medium (Chlorophyll precursors, maybe?) to do what those same precursors did to Earth?
Mind you I am not a college trained scientist, but I also don't forget something I learned back in High School, even if it WAS pre-Communist-Corps...
Hmmm...
Interesting that she's got CO2 readings that go back 4 million years; I didn't know that the IPCC kept data that long.
And since she claims the CO2 levels are permanent, I guess that means that every plant on earth is saturated, and can't absorb any more, and also that no new plants would ever be able to absorb CO2 from the air.
Would have been nice if she'd at least tried to back one of those two statements up.
Start with the photo at the top. Completely biased rubbish that has NOTHING to do with the article topic.
Then the author relates scientifically unsupportable claptrap rubbish again and again.
AJA, maybe you should look at this article to post instead of the one you posted:
It one has a nice explanatory video embedded:
http://newatlas.com/co2-ethanol-nanop...
thanks for bringing this technology to our attention, AJA;^)
It is food for vegetation, all other forms of live on earth depend on vegetation.
This idea can be yet another excuse to increase taxation on all and subsidies to looters.
I'd call that exchange the most essential balance of nature there is.
http://newatlas.com/co2-ethanol-nanop...
there is a promo video that explains their plan to use excess solar/wind power (when there is an excess only) and "store" that energy that would otherwise be wasted by making ethanol. There is no assurance that this is the most efficient method to do so, but the scientist does claim it is over 60% efficient.
It is not a detailed explanation but at least there has been some thought on application. No comment on whether this is an unbiased source ;^)
Climate has changed a LOT over thousands of years and it wont stop now. Its part of the way things are.
Not unrelated, I think, the city is now a disaster zone with vast areas looking like Dresden, Germany after the carpet bombing of WW2 acre after acre of barren fields where homes once stood. The real estate now sells for about the same as vacant farmland further west in the state.
The mention of tying this in with "wind and solar", I doubt that. They are only good as far as they go, which is a very long distance empty so far.
I really think the authors are just exploiting the fact that CO2 happens to be a main cause of global warming and also happens to be one of the reagents in the reaction. It's hard to envision this every being deployed on such a large scale that it puts a dent in the atmospheric concentration of CO2 more than just planting trees. It's one of those battery-like redox reactions, where electrons move from an electrode to an electrolyte bath. But even if we imagine it on a huge scale, you still release the CO2 when you burn it. It's not undoing the effects of extracting huge amounts of oil and coal and burning it. It's just moving Cs, Os, Hs, and electrons around in way that stores energy in a place you have to a place where you need it.