Harvard Prof Touts Sea-floor CO2 Sequestration

authordefault
onAug 16, 2006 @ 11:07 PDT

Siphoning liquified CO2 to the bottom of the ocean may work, according to this Scientific American article, but Greenpeace arguesย it would be cheaper for people to start addressing climate change by conserving energy and looking to renewableย alternatives.

authordefault
Admin's short bio, lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Voluptate maxime officiis sed aliquam! Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit.

Related Posts

onDec 12, 2025 @ 12:55 PST

As Trump pushes to slash the EPAโ€™s budget to its lowest level in four decades, 15 years of state-level cuts have already hollowed out environmental enforcement across the country.

As Trump pushes to slash the EPAโ€™s budget to its lowest level in four decades, 15 years of state-level cuts have already hollowed out environmental enforcement across the country.
onDec 12, 2025 @ 02:00 PST

Utilities started reversing coal powerโ€™s โ€œirreversibleโ€ decline. Will it last?

Utilities started reversing coal powerโ€™s โ€œirreversibleโ€ decline. Will it last?
onDec 11, 2025 @ 08:50 PST

Right-wing political group Americans for Prosperity, backed by oil and gas billionaire Charles Koch, sees data centers as part of a larger pro-fossil fuel agenda.

Right-wing political group Americans for Prosperity, backed by oil and gas billionaire Charles Koch, sees data centers as part of a larger pro-fossil fuel agenda.
onDec 10, 2025 @ 20:00 PST

โ€œGroundbreaking investigationโ€ reveals how the IEA has campaigned against climate action after taking cash from fossil fuel firms.

โ€œGroundbreaking investigationโ€ reveals how the IEA has campaigned against climate action after taking cash from fossil fuel firms.