The Longship that could help save the planet
63 Degrees North11 Feb 2021

The Longship that could help save the planet

Everyone knows there’s just too much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere — and we’re heating up the planet at an unprecedented pace.

More than 20 years ago, Norwegians helped pioneer an approach to dealing with CO2 that’s still ongoing today— they captured it and pumped it into a rock formation deep under the sea.

Now the Norwegian government is building on those decades of experience with a large-scale carbon capture and storage project called Longship.

Will it work? Is it safe? And is it something that other countries can benefit from, too?

Our guests for this episode were Olav Bolland, Philip Ringrose and Mona Mølnvik.

You can find the transcript of the episode here.


More resources/reading:

Olav Bolland’s book:

Nord, Lars O.; Bolland, Olav. (2020) Carbon Dioxide Emission Management in Power Generation. Wiley-VCH Verlagsgesellschaft. 2020. ISBN 978-3-527-34753-7.

You can read the White Paper from the Norwegian government about the Longship project here.

Here’s a press release from 15 December 2020 that reports on the Norwegian Storting’s funding approval for the Longship project.

This link takes you to a transcript, in English, from the press conference from 21 September 2020 in which Norwegian officials announce the Longship plan.

Here’s the official website for the Longship CCS project.

You can read about the Norwegian CCS Research Centre that Mona Mølnvik is head of here.

An older, but still good video about Sleipner

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KG5_WSXj1pI&t=271s

  Philip Ringrose’s group’s most recent video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pAAb1S4bqks&t=28s

  A e-lecture by Philip Ringrose about CCS

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eozVdrvejDs&t=400s

Selected popular science and scientific articles

If the world can capture carbon, there’s capacity to store it. Norwegian SciTech News, 13 December 2019

The world doesn’t realise how much we need CO2 storage. Norwegian SciTech News, 5 December 2016

Carbon capture and storage essential to reach climate target. Norwegian SciTech News, 7 April 2014

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2013-09-20/norway-drops-moon-landing-as-mongstad-carbon-capture-scrapped


Ringrose, Philip; Meckel, T A. (2019) Maturing global CO2 storage resources on offshore continental margins to achieve 2DS emissions reductions.Scientific Reports. 9 (1).

Grethe Tangen, Erik G.B. Lindeberg, Arvid Nøttvedt, Svein Eggen. (2014)

Large-scale Storage of CO2 on the Norwegian Shelf Enabling CCS Readiness in Europe, Energy Procedia, vol. 51, pp.326-333

Mai Bui, Claire S. Adjiman, Andre Bardow et al. (2018) Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS): the way forward. Energy Environ. Sci . 11, 1062

From the summary for policymakers, IPCC Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5C (2018):

“All pathways that limit global warming to 1.5°C with limited or no overshoot project the use of carbon dioxide removal (CDR) on the order of 100–1000 GtCO2 over the 21st century. CDR would be used to compensate for residual emissions and, in most cases, achieve net negative emissions to return global warming to 1.5°C following a peak (high confidence). CDR deployment of several hundreds of GtCO2 is subject to multiple feasibility and sustainability constraints (high confidence). Significant near-term emissions reductions and measures to lower energy and land demand can limit CDR deployment to a few hundred GtCO2 without reliance on bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) (high confidence).”

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Avsnitt(35)

What babies can tell us – and why we need to listen

What babies can tell us – and why we need to listen

If you've ever seen an infant lying on its back, you've surely seen them endlessly waving their arms and legs in seemingly haphazard ways. And crying? To the uneducated eye and ear, it does all seem a...

27 Dec 202541min

ENCORE: When the doctor is out

ENCORE: When the doctor is out

ENCORE: This episode was first published in Oct. 2023. Sierra Leone used to be the most dangerous place in the world to give birth. Without enough doctors to do C-sections, women and babies were dying...

18 Sep 202534min

ENCORE: Running rats and healing hearts

ENCORE: Running rats and healing hearts

ENCORE: This episode was first published in Sept. 2023.In 1998, a young Norwegian exercise physiologist found that a technique he had used to help Olympic athletes could help heart patients too. But h...

14 Aug 202534min

Walrus tusks were Viking age gold

Walrus tusks were Viking age gold

Historians have floated a half-dozen theories for why Viking Greenland settlements suddenly vanished in the 1300s and 1400s, after nearly 500 years of occupation. Was it climate change, the Black Deat...

10 Juli 202530min

An accidental discovery: From failed experiment to new antibiotic

An accidental discovery: From failed experiment to new antibiotic

NTNU professor Marit Otterlei nearly threw out the contaminated cell culture where she and her colleagues were testing a new cancer drug.The problem arose on a hot summer day, in Trondheim, in a count...

13 Juni 202528min

New clues from old bones: Norwegian Vikings were very, very violent

New clues from old bones: Norwegian Vikings were very, very violent

We may think the Vikings were all the same, but it turns out that Viking violence wasn’t the same everywhere. New research shows that Norwegian Vikings were buried with 50 times more weapons—and had ...

15 Apr 202531min

Old flames die hard – the saga of solar cookers

Old flames die hard – the saga of solar cookers

Jimmy Chaciga, a PhD research fellow at Makerere University in Uganda, thinks he has what it will take to get Ugandan households to adopt solar-powered cookers. First, cookers need to be simple to ope...

14 Feb 202521min

From Running Rats to Brain Maps: A Nobel Odyssey

From Running Rats to Brain Maps: A Nobel Odyssey

When the phone rang 10 years ago while Norwegian neuroscientist May-Britt Moser was in a particularly engaging lab meeting, she almost didn't answer it.Good thing she did! It was Göran Hansson, secret...

26 Nov 202437min

Populärt inom Vetenskap

svd-nyhetsartiklar
p3-dystopia
dumma-manniskor
pojkmottagningen
allt-du-velat-veta
det-morka-psyket
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
bildningspodden
rss-vetenskapsradion-2
medicinvetarna
rss-vetenskapsradion
halsorevolutionen
rss-ufobortom-rimligt-tvivel-2
rss-spraket
paranormalt-med-caroline-giertz
4health-med-anna-sparre
vetenskapsradion
dumforklarat
sexet
pengar-och-politik