This new device could eliminate one ton of carbon dioxide out of the air per day. The average American produces 20 tons of carbon dioxide annually, but technologies generally develop exponentially (think about how little progress there were in computers from 1948 to the 1980s and look at how far we've came in the last 20 years), so this device will be far, far better in the future and could very well be a solution.
I personally don't really believe in man-made global warming since I think it's just a normal fluctuation of the earth's climate cycle, but this machine (It's still in the development phase, so it will definitely be improved in the future) would eventually allow us to get back to pre-industrial age carbon dioxide levels. So, if the warming was caused by CO2, it would be gone. And we could continue using fossil fuels and whatever else without raising carbon dioxide emissions.
Oh, and of course the environmentalists like Al Gore oppose it because they really don't care about the environment; it's about money, power, and control over your lives. Typical; they get a possible solution to their problem, then they shun it. And the media is against it, as usual. This should be a major story, but it's not...

<!-- end story tools--> <!-- begin media --> <!-- end media --> A group of US scientists has made a breakthrough in developing “carbon scrubbers” to remove excess CO2 from the atmosphere.
Led by Columbia University physicist Klaus Lackner and backed by a private company in Tuscon, Ariz., called Global Research Technologies, the team is working to build a giant “tree” that draws in air and passes it over an ion exchange membrane that traps the carbon dioxide. The gas could then be deposited underground, pumped into a greenhouse where it would help plants grow, or put to some other use.
The scientists say the device could remove about one ton of CO2 per day from the atmosphere. The average American produces about 20 tons of carbon dioxide each year, contributing to a total worldwide output of about 27 billion tons annually.
Scientists have speculated about such devices for a few years now (the BBC documented Lackner’s efforts in early 2003), but were unable to find an inexpensive way of separating the trapped carbon from the absorber membrane. But the Guardian, which obtained one of Lackner’s team’s patent applications, reports that the scientists have recently discovered that passing humid air over the membranes causes them to “exhale” carbon dioxide. This development, say scientists, reduce the scrubber’s energy use “tenfold.”
The June issue of Smithsonian Magazine features a Q&A with Wallace Broecker, one of the lead scientists on this project. Broecker, the Columbia university climate expert who was the first to coin the term “global warming” in the 1970s, describes a device “about 6 to 10 feet in diameter, 50 feet high … like a little silo, in that shape so the wind could blow through it from any direction.”
He says that we would need roughly 17 million of these scrubbers to take care of carbon emissions from the United States. While they could operate anywhere, they would work best in deserts, Broecker says. That works out to about 60 million or so around the world. While that sounds like a lot, Broecker believes that carbon scrubbing may be our only hope, as humanity will need to continue burning fossil fuels for the short term.
We have enough coal to run the planet for several hundred years. We could make gasoline out of coal for the equivalent of $50 a barrel. People are not going to use solar energy if it costs 10 times more than energy derived from coal. We are not putting enough resources into developing the technology to capture and store carbon. Everybody is worried about carbon footprints as if that is a solution. It’s not. It is important, I’m not putting that down, but conservation in itself can’t do it. The world has to run on energy.
The device could be eligible for Richard Branson’s Virgin Earth Challenge prize, a competition offering $25 million to whoever can come up with a way to remove at least one billion tons of carbon dioxide a year from Earth’s atmosphere.
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