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On 10/30/24 17:04, Scott Lurndal wrote:No, for the sake of civilization.Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> writes:yes and it has a short half life in the atmosphere but weOn 10/30/2024 5:50 PM, Bobbie Sellers wrote:There are methane leaks under all the oceans, but most of itOn 10/30/24 13:55, Scott Dorsey wrote:There are probably more methane leaks from natural seeps in the seabedBobbie Sellers <blissInSanFrancisco@mouse-potato.com> wrote:There are lots of Methane leaks from fields in Southern>Maybe. The problem is that LNG if it escapes into the environment is a
More Putin BS propaganda. LNG is about 50% better for the
environment than coal or 100% better than the way Russian Troops
have treated Nuclear Reactor power plants.
worse greenhouse gas than CO2, although not as stable. So if you take
into account the large amounts of gas lost to the atmosphere with
fracking,
I could see it looking pretty bad.
Of course, the solution for this isn't to abandon natural gas but to
seal systems better and reduce waste.
--scott
>
California and all over the world wherever oil was sought as well
there are leaks from garbage dumps where decomposition is taking
place. The evidence is riff that the clathrates undersea are
melting and releasing methane while the Permafrost is collaping
into large pits releasing more methane. Satellites are detecting
plumes of this gas in the atmosphere.
>
All fossil fuels will be abandoned becuse the Climate Warming will
make it impossible to handle. Think about the temperatures that
gasoline ignites at and which promotes its vaporizastion.
When the Ports are flooded how will tankers get close enough
to transfer petroleum? And the last fossil fuels will be used
to power miliary equipment.
If you want read about how we would cope with that read
the Emberverse series by S. M. Stirling. It starts with the destruction
of the usefulness of technology as presently deployed. That would
kill me but aside from that off-putting realization it is very powerful
series. But his inventiveness seemed to have flagged at the 3rd
generation post-Change..
>
bliss
of the Gulf of Mexico than anywhere else in the planet. At 2,000 feet
below the surface to 10,000 feet below the surface, there is six feet of
frozen methane covering the entire Gulf of Mexico seabed. The frozen
methane is constantly sublimating and rising to bubble up into the
atmosphere.
never leaves the ocean and the carbon is precipitated out.
>
"The total modern emission of seafloor methane is likely
underestimated10 and the volumes of methane released at
the seafloor are orders of magnitude higher than those
reaching the sea surface, owing to the short residence
time of methane in seawater11,12. The volume of methane
released from the seafloor is reduced also via microbial
Anaerobic Oxidation of Methane (AOM)13, which consumes an
estimated 45\u201361 Tg\u2219y\u22121 in the shallow sub-seafloor"
>
"The AOM process is of primary importance since it provides
a significant mechanism to decrease the volume of escaping
methane10 and leads to the precipitation of methane-derived
carbonates (MDC) as a by-product15, thus representing a
carbon sink in the sedimentary record16,17"
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-59431-3
It may be that man-made leaks add to the volume that reaches
the surface, which is bad, but the bulk of the carbon in
naturally seeped CH4 returns to the sea floor and never
reaches the atmosphere.
We humans did not cause this, it is nature. And this phenomena happens
all over the planet. I think that Gulf of Mexico is the worst since the
several reservoir pressures peak at 35,000 psia.
Lynn
>
humans tilted the balance with our COO emissions. All for the sake
of faster and easier.
>
bliss
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