this post was submitted on 10 Dec 2023
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There's nothing thermodynamically wrong with burning methane, releasing the water, and putting the CO2 back underground. Sequestration does not require un-oxidizing the carbon.
Though if we're going to bury harmful waste underground, nuclear power reduces the quantity of waste by a factor of a million.
Maaaaybe if the CO2 is captured at the point source of the methane burner. But if you've already let it disperse into the atmosphere, forget about it ever making sense to try to compensate for that huge increase in entropy by collecting and re-concentrating it.
Tick…tick…tick…
I'm not sure what you're trying to convey here. Carbon sequestration is unarguably a way to mitigate climate change, and sequestration of CO~2~ is probably the most reasonable way to do so. It doesn't need to be as a gas, as taking CO~2~ and exposing it to various oxides creates carbonates, which are generally very stable compounds like limestone.
The other commenter simply said carbon could be captured as CO~2~ and sequestered without being reduced, which is absolutely true and frankly makes much more sense from a physics/thermodynamics POV.
You guessed right - without reductions or conversion it simply becomes a ticking time bomb. Anything secure enough to capture and contain a gas reliably for millennia without maintenance will be too expensive to be practical.
Methane is a greenhouse gas more potent than CO2 that was stored underground for millennia. You would need actual data to conclude that storing CO2 is too expensive.
There are no manmade Methane stores from before the Christian era and there never have been. If you're going to argue that methane that was produced underground millions of years ago is a valid human goal, you may as well propose the simpler method of just increasing the Earth's orbit by a few tenths of a percent to offset the heating due to CO2. Done and done.