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REVIEW OF RELATED
LITERATURE This chapter presents the related literature after the thourough and in depth search done by the researcher.
According to Noell Eckley Selin that the carbon sequestration
occurs both naturally and as a result of anthropogenic activities and typically refers to the storage of carbon that has the immediate potential to become carbon dioxide gas. In response to growing concerns about climate change resulting from increased carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere , considerable interest has been drawn to the possibility of increasing the rate of carbon sequestration through changes in land use and forestry and also through geoengineering techniques such as carbon capture and storage. Anthropogenic activities such as the burning of fossil fuels have released carbon from its long-term geologic storage as coal,petroleum and natural gas and have delivered it to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide gas. Carbon dioxide is also released naturally, through the decomposition of plants and animal. The amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has increased since the beginning of the industrial age, and this increase has been caused mainly by the burning of fossil fuels.Carbon Dioxide is a very effective greenhouse gas—that is, a gas that absorb infrared radiation emitted from Earth’s surface. As carbon dioxide concentrations rise in the atmosphere, more infrared radiation is retained, and the average temperature of Earth’s lower atmosphere rises. This process is referred to as global warming. According to E Tamacs, T Krizan and M Kiss(2015) climate change as one of the most important contemporary environmental issues ,draws attention to the global climate regulation ecosystem service of the natural vegation,in which forest play an outstanding role .In the process of photosynthesis carbon dioxide is fixed in different compartment of living biomass(stems, branches, foliage and roots)and in the soil. After timber harvesting and industrial processing the carbon of wood maybe stored further in wood products with different life spans. In the end ,it returns to the atmosphere as a turnover or logging. Earlier it was generally thought that ageing forest should be at best considered in carbon neutral. This was based on the assumption that the growth trends of individual trees and even-aged monospecific stands can be directly extended to natural forest. Recently research on the effects of forest management intensity has shown that forest management and disturbance affect forest soil ang biomass carbon stocks and emissions to the atmosphere. Harvesting frequency and structural retention significantly affect mean carbon storage, and the mean carbon sequestration is significant greater for non-managed stands compared to any of the active management scenarios.
According to (Natural Resources and Environment at the
University of Michigan (2017) that the carbon utilization is the notion that captured CO2 from BECCS, DAC or other means can be used in ways beyond basic geologic storage. It is the view that captured CO2 provides value beyond the positive removal impact to the climate. Carbon utilization provides a market for CO2 that is sequestered. One of the main arguments against negative emission options is the cost of such endeavors. If CO2 can be used for commercial purposes, then it can offset costs of CDR options that are used to capture it and help kick- start carbon removal activities. CO2 can be used in the soda industry, making chemicals, cement, plastics, refrigerants, among other products. Of all the possible products, this report chose enhanced oil recovery (EOR) to focus upon. The rationale for this is that EOR is an established option with decades of use in the oil production industry. EOR is the process in which captured CO2 is injected into oil wells which are nearing the end of their productive lives. This injection of CO2 increases the recoverable CO2 as it pushes crude oil out of the pores of the sediment.One of the biggest factors that make EOR appealing to CDR is that the oil wells act as a storage method. The CO2 which stays in the wells remains there and the CO2 which comes up with the recovered oil is injected again. While producing a source of revenue for CO2 capture activities, EOR also uses infrastructure and knowledge of oil wells that already exist which significantly reduce the costs associated with EOR injection activities. In 2010, 50 MtCO2 were injected into oil wells (Benson et al., 2013). To have a measurable impact on the atmosphere, gigatonnes of CO2 would need to be injected and the environmental consequences of such large-scale injection are unknown.
According to Environmental Soil Chemistry(Second
Edition)2003, Carbon sequestration is a method that has recently gained a great interest among many researchers. This process is closely related to the GHG emission reduction order, which was imposed by the Kyoto Protocol established in 2004. Carbon sequestration is associated with the capture of its compounds from the environment, which reduces the progress of the greenhouse effect (Lal et al., 2015). There are two basic methods of carbon sequestration: direct and indirect. The direct method is implemented by immediately binding carbon compounds at the source of its formation—before it enters the atmosphere. Bounded carbon is stored for a long period of time in specially designated landfills that are properly protected and environmentally friendly. The second method of sequestration—indirect —involves the use of plants that bind CO2 in photosynthesis or when carbon compounds are bound in a soil environment. In these methods, sequestration can take place involving physical, chemical, or biological processes. There is also the possibility of carbon sequestration by advanced methods.