Jan. 30, 2009 -- Each year farmers in the United States reap enormous bounty from their endless corn fields and amber waves of grain. In all, some 300 million tons of food float down the Mississippi River toward waiting, hungry mouths. But a new study suggests there is a second harvest to be had from America's vast bread basket, too -- one that could be an answer to global warming. Sucked from the atmosphere through photosynthesis and sequestered in leftover husks and stalks are 150 million tons of carbon. Scientists now claim that all we need to do is toss them to the bottom of the sea, and a huge quantity of greenhouse gases be banished at a stroke. "This is just recycling carbon," Stuart Strand of the University of Washington said. "It came out of the deep environment where it was stored for years as fossil fuels. We want to put it back." Strand and co-author Gregory Benford of the University of California, Irvine have proposed what they see as a simple carbon sequestration scheme. Simply harvest about 30 percent of the straw and corn stalks left on the field after harvest, ship it out to sea on barges, weight it down, and dump in by the ton into the cold, dark depths of the Gulf of Mexico. Related Content: Get the Latest in Science and Tech News From Discovery How Stuff Works: Global Warming CO2 Burial Schemes Get the Green Light If the process is mimicked for farms and crops around the world, Strand and Benford estimate their method would remove a total of 600 million tons of carbon from the atmosphere each year. That takes into consideration fossil fuels needed to transport the plant mass, which they think will emit 8 tons of carbon for every 100 tons they bury at sea. Worldwide, humanity's penchant for burning fossil fuels emits 8 billion tons into the atmosphere a year. Compared to capturing carbon from a coal-fired power plant, or fermenting switch grass into cellulosic ethanol, the researchers' plan is technologically simple, too. "As far as practicality, we could do this tomorrow, it's just a matter of loading up the barges," Strand said. But some there are some major unknowns. Depositing millions of tons of straw bales and corn stalks into a deep sea environment could have a profound impact on the local ecology. And John Harte of the University of California, Berkeley said that removing crop leftovers from fields could lead to longer-term increases in soil erosion, and declines in soil quality. Shipping all that plant matter from the farm to the ocean could prove prohibitively expensive, too. The researchers calculated that each ton of carbon would cost about $340 to bury; in 2006 the price of carbon on the European market topped out at less than half that price. "The real message of this paper is that to solve the problem of global warming, we need to keep thinking of new things," Harte said. "This may not make a big contribution, but we need to give it some more consideration -- it's a mistake to think that all of the good ideas have already been thought of." Related Links: Discovery Tech My Take: We Need to Bury Emissions Get More NewsSpiders, Scorpions Among World's Oldest CreaturesMany creepy crawlies have been on Earth much longer than previously believed.Blood-Sucking Vampire Bats Sing DuetsWhite-winged vampire bats "harmonize" with separated roost mates.Oldest Hebrew Writing Possibly FoundAncient inscriptions on a 3,000-year-old pottery shard could make history.Rare, Prehistoric-Age Reptile Found in N.Z.A tuatara has been spotted on the New Zealand mainland for the first time in 200 years.Iceman Has No Living RelativesOetzi, the 5,300 year-old frozen mummy, left no living genetic legacy.SLIDE SHOW: Landscapes of TerrorWhat makes a place feel scary? There are scientific explanations.It's Official: People Are Warming the PolesHumans are conclusively to blame for polar warming, say scientists.Eight-Armed Animal Preceded DinosaursWhat may be one of Earth's first animals was no bigger than a coaster and had eight arms.Phoenicians Live on in People's GenesOne in 17 Mediterranean men may be descended from ancient Phoenicians.Pesticides, Fertilizers Linked to Frog DeclineA pesticide is found to promote parasites among amphibians.Hubble Telescope Taking Photos AgainThe Hubble Space Telescope is once again snapping stunning photos of the universe.Andean Mummy Hairs Show Hallucinogen UseScientists find direct evidence of hallucinogenic drug use among ancient Andeans.Opals on Mars Reveal Planet's Long Wet PastOpals found on Mars suggest the planet has been wet for much longer. |
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