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Open to Debate

Is Carbon Capture Essential to Fighting Climate Change?

Open to Debate

Open to Debate

Education, Society & Culture, News, Government, Politics

4.52.1K Ratings

🗓️ 5 May 2023

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When it comes to carbon dioxide, last year was a record year. The world emitted more of the climate-warming gas in 2022 than in any year since scientists began recording levels in 1900. The culprit, says the International Energy Agency, is society’s voracious appetite for fossil fuels, and the need to burn them. So … what can be done to prevent dangerous levels of warming? One potential method is called carbon capture and storage, a technology in which CO2 is extracted and stored in underground facilities. In fact, as recently as February, Exxon Mobil announced that it will use Honeywell technology in Texas to capture some seven million tons of carbon dioxide per year. Other companies, meanwhile, have followed suit. But it is not without controversy. Critics say the technology is not cost effective, is unreliable in large scales, and that the level of carbon removal needed to help the planet is well beyond current capacity. As such, they say, it is a dangerous distraction in the broader fight against climate change, potentially diluting the urgency in reducing emissions. Others say these systems are ever more adept at capturing gases from the air, and that they have the potential to become a critical tool in the battle against rising emissions. It is in this context that we debate the following question: Is Carbon Capture Essential to Fighting Climate Change? Arguing “YES” is Katherine Romanak, Research Scientist, Bureau of Economic Geology Arguing is “NO”: Mark Zachary Jacobson, Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford University, Director of its Atmosphere/Energy Program & Co-founder of The Solutions Project Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:04.0

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0:11.0

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0:14.0

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0:19.0

Crypto trading involves risk of loss.

0:30.0

Hi everybody, this is Open to Debate. I'm John Donbenn.

0:40.0

The subject this time is climate change.

0:43.0

No, this is not a debate about whether it's a crisis or it's something we can adapt to or regulate for.

0:47.0

We have already debated those questions on this program, and I recommend you take a listen to those debates.

0:52.0

They're pretty good.

0:53.0

But this one is about a particular solution for slowing down the earth's warming.

0:58.0

It is called carbon capture.

1:00.0

Now the name pretty much says it all.

1:02.0

Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere emitted by our factories and power plants and airplanes and cars is adding significantly to the greenhouse effect that's heating up the earth.

1:11.0

We in fact globally send 40 billion tons of carbon dioxide into the sky every year.

1:16.0

Carbon capture means using technology to literally suck that carbon back out of the air or out of fumes and emissions put out by heavy industry right at the point.

1:27.0

It is literally capturing the CO2, the carbon there, and either finding some good use for it or burying it deep in the earth where it originally came from.

1:39.0

There are different ways of doing this.

1:41.0

The technologies are already beginning to be used in other zirren development.

1:45.0

But there is a debate among people who are devoted to slowing the earth's warming, which is even if these technologies do what they're supposed to capture carbon.

1:55.0

Does that mean that they merit being used?

1:59.0

Now smart people disagree on this, pretty vehemently in fact.

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