Carbon capture is vital in tackling the climate crisis | Letters
Prof Myles Allen, Stephanie Loo and Toby Lockwood, and Olivia Powis, respond to an article by George Monbiot about ‘the great carbon capture con’George Monbiot suggests that we can solve...
By Guardian Staff · The Guardian Opinion
Prof Myles Allen, Stephanie Loo and Toby Lockwood , and Olivia Powis , respond to an article by George Monbiot about ‘the great carbon capture con’ George Monbiot suggests that we can solve climate change without carbon capture and storage ( The great carbon capture con: behold the wasted billions Burnham could claw back, 8 July ). Physics says otherwise. The world is going to generate more carbon dioxide than we can safely dump into the atmosphere, and we can’t rely on our stressed biosphere and oceans to mop up the excess. Stopping global warming will therefore require capturing and durably disposing of carbon dioxide on a huge scale, which right now means injecting it back underground. Where George does make a good point is in questioning whether carbon dioxide disposal should for ever be paid for using public money. Why should private companies be allowed to make large profits taking carbon out of the ground while the taxpayer foots the bill to put it back? The obvious solution: require those who extract fossil fuels to pay for the disposal of the carbon dioxide their products generate. If the fraction they store rises to 100% by mid-century, fossil fuel use would cause no further warming thereafter. Continue reading...