Limits and CO2 equilibration of near-coast alkalinity enhancement

Ocean alkalinity enhancement (OAE) has recently gained attention as a potential method for carbon dioxide removal (CDR) at gigatonne (Gt) scale, with near-coast OAE operations being economically favorable due to proximity to mineral and energy sources. In this paper we study critical questions which...

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Published in:Biogeosciences
Main Authors: He, Jing, Tyka, Michael D.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-20-27-2023
https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/20/27/2023/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:bg105318 2023-05-15T16:52:42+02:00 Limits and CO2 equilibration of near-coast alkalinity enhancement He, Jing Tyka, Michael D. 2023-01-03 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-20-27-2023 https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/20/27/2023/ eng eng doi:10.5194/bg-20-27-2023 https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/20/27/2023/ eISSN: 1726-4189 Text 2023 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-20-27-2023 2023-01-09T17:22:42Z Ocean alkalinity enhancement (OAE) has recently gained attention as a potential method for carbon dioxide removal (CDR) at gigatonne (Gt) scale, with near-coast OAE operations being economically favorable due to proximity to mineral and energy sources. In this paper we study critical questions which determine the scale and viability of OAE. Which coastal locations are able to sustain a large flux of alkalinity at minimal pH and Ω Arag (aragonite saturation) changes? What is the interference distance between adjacent OAE projects? How much CO 2 is absorbed per unit of alkalinity added? How quickly does the induced CO 2 deficiency equilibrate with the atmosphere? Choosing relatively conservative constraints on Δ pH or Δ Omega, we examine the limits of OAE using the ECCO LLC270 (0.3 ∘ ) global circulation model. We find that the sustainable OAE rate varies over 1–2 orders of magnitude between different coasts and exhibits complex patterns and non-local dependencies which vary from region to region. In general, OAE in areas of strong coastal currents enables the largest fluxes and depending on the direction of these currents, neighboring OAE sites can exhibit dependencies as far as 400 km or more. At these steady state fluxes most regional stretches of coastline are able to accommodate on the order of 10s to 100s of megatonnes of negative emissions within 300 km of the coast. We conclude that near-coastal OAE has the potential to scale globally to several Gt CO 2 yr −1 of drawdown with conservative pH constraints, if the effort is spread over the majority of available coastlines. Depending on the location, we find a diverse set of equilibration kinetics, determined by the interplay of gas exchange and surface residence time. Most locations reach an uptake efficiency plateau of 0.6–0.8 mol CO 2 per mol of alkalinity after 3–4 years, after which there is only slow additional CO 2 uptake. Regions of significant downwelling (e.g., around Iceland) should be avoided by OAE deployments, as in such locations up to half of ... Text Iceland Copernicus Publications: E-Journals Biogeosciences 20 1 27 43
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collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
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language English
description Ocean alkalinity enhancement (OAE) has recently gained attention as a potential method for carbon dioxide removal (CDR) at gigatonne (Gt) scale, with near-coast OAE operations being economically favorable due to proximity to mineral and energy sources. In this paper we study critical questions which determine the scale and viability of OAE. Which coastal locations are able to sustain a large flux of alkalinity at minimal pH and Ω Arag (aragonite saturation) changes? What is the interference distance between adjacent OAE projects? How much CO 2 is absorbed per unit of alkalinity added? How quickly does the induced CO 2 deficiency equilibrate with the atmosphere? Choosing relatively conservative constraints on Δ pH or Δ Omega, we examine the limits of OAE using the ECCO LLC270 (0.3 ∘ ) global circulation model. We find that the sustainable OAE rate varies over 1–2 orders of magnitude between different coasts and exhibits complex patterns and non-local dependencies which vary from region to region. In general, OAE in areas of strong coastal currents enables the largest fluxes and depending on the direction of these currents, neighboring OAE sites can exhibit dependencies as far as 400 km or more. At these steady state fluxes most regional stretches of coastline are able to accommodate on the order of 10s to 100s of megatonnes of negative emissions within 300 km of the coast. We conclude that near-coastal OAE has the potential to scale globally to several Gt CO 2 yr −1 of drawdown with conservative pH constraints, if the effort is spread over the majority of available coastlines. Depending on the location, we find a diverse set of equilibration kinetics, determined by the interplay of gas exchange and surface residence time. Most locations reach an uptake efficiency plateau of 0.6–0.8 mol CO 2 per mol of alkalinity after 3–4 years, after which there is only slow additional CO 2 uptake. Regions of significant downwelling (e.g., around Iceland) should be avoided by OAE deployments, as in such locations up to half of ...
format Text
author He, Jing
Tyka, Michael D.
spellingShingle He, Jing
Tyka, Michael D.
Limits and CO2 equilibration of near-coast alkalinity enhancement
author_facet He, Jing
Tyka, Michael D.
author_sort He, Jing
title Limits and CO2 equilibration of near-coast alkalinity enhancement
title_short Limits and CO2 equilibration of near-coast alkalinity enhancement
title_full Limits and CO2 equilibration of near-coast alkalinity enhancement
title_fullStr Limits and CO2 equilibration of near-coast alkalinity enhancement
title_full_unstemmed Limits and CO2 equilibration of near-coast alkalinity enhancement
title_sort limits and co2 equilibration of near-coast alkalinity enhancement
publishDate 2023
url https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-20-27-2023
https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/20/27/2023/
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op_relation doi:10.5194/bg-20-27-2023
https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/20/27/2023/
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