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Journal ArticleDOI

Capture of CO2 and Water While Driving for Use in the Food and Agricultural Systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed to retrofit the wasted energy in a car's exhaust to capture, concentrate, store, and deliver liquid CO2 and water for agricultural and food systems.
Abstract: This white paper proposes research on the design and evaluation of an integrated system assembled to the vehicle with no energy penalty where a sequence of processes, cooling, heating, mass transfer, and compression, will take place while driving. The increasing demand for fresh produce has led to an expansion of the US urban agriculture industry (greenhouses) which uses carbon dioxide (CO2) enrichment from burning fossil fuels to increase plant productivity and to shorten the plant growth time. The demand for CO2 and water in greenhouses is massive (2.81 kg CO2eq/kg produce, 22 L water/kg produce), and alternate CO2 and water delivery sources are essential to make post-harvest food processing technologies such as dense-phase CO2 pasteurization of beverages more sustainable. Internal combustion engines (ICE) have an average efficiency of about 30%, with 30% of the thermal energy wasted in the exhaust gases. A typical passenger vehicle emits about 4.6 metric tons of CO2 and 21,000 l of water per year into the environment. Although multiple carbon capture technologies exist, the size of these plants is large, their unit operations are fixed, and the use of novel materials is limited. In this white paper, we propose to retrofit the wasted energy in a car’s exhaust to capture, concentrate, store, and deliver liquid CO2 and water for agricultural and food systems. Preliminary thermodynamic and exergy analysis indicates that this is feasible. Specially designed heat and mass transfer units with novel materials and 3D printing technology could be easily deployed and used while driving to mitigate the global warming problem while addressing the needs of agricultural systems.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the impacts of global climate change on food systems are expected to be widespread, complex, geographically and temporally variable, and profoundly influenced by socioeconomic conditions, and some synergies among food security, adaptati...
Abstract: Food systems contribute 19%–29% of global anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, releasing 9,800–16,900 megatonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (MtCO2e) in 2008. Agricultural production, including indirect emissions associated with land-cover change, contributes 80%–86% of total food system emissions, with significant regional variation. The impacts of global climate change on food systems are expected to be widespread, complex, geographically and temporally variable, and profoundly influenced by socioeconomic conditions. Historical statistical studies and integrated assessment models provide evidence that climate change will affect agricultural yields and earnings, food prices, reliability of delivery, food quality, and, notably, food safety. Low-income producers and consumers of food will be more vulnerable to climate change owing to their comparatively limited ability to invest in adaptive institutions and technologies under increasing climatic risks. Some synergies among food security, adaptati...

1,598 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
07 Nov 2019-Nature
TL;DR: The capture and use of carbon dioxide to create valuable products might lower the net costs of reducing emissions or removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, but barriers to implementation remain substantial and resource constraints prevent the simultaneous deployment of all pathways.
Abstract: The capture and use of carbon dioxide to create valuable products might lower the net costs of reducing emissions or removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Here we review ten pathways for the utilization of carbon dioxide. Pathways that involve chemicals, fuels and microalgae might reduce emissions of carbon dioxide but have limited potential for its removal, whereas pathways that involve construction materials can both utilize and remove carbon dioxide. Land-based pathways can increase agricultural output and remove carbon dioxide. Our assessment suggests that each pathway could scale to over 0.5 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide utilization annually. However, barriers to implementation remain substantial and resource constraints prevent the simultaneous deployment of all pathways. Ten pathways for the utilization of carbon dioxide are reviewed, considering their potential scale, economics and barriers to implementation.

879 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the relationship between consumer motivation, understanding and use of sustainability labels on food products (both environmental and ethical labels) and found that consumers expressed medium high to high levels of concern with sustainability issues at the general level, but lower levels of interest in concrete food product choices.

841 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive review of negative emissions technologies (NETs) is presented, focusing on seven technologies: bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), afforestation and reforestation, enhanced weathering, ocean fertilisation, biochar, and soil carbon sequestration.
Abstract: The most recent IPCC assessment has shown an important role for negative emissions technologies (NETs) in limiting global warming to 2 °C cost-effectively. However, a bottom-up, systematic, reproducible, and transparent literature assessment of the different options to remove CO2 from the atmosphere is currently missing. In part 1 of this three-part review on NETs, we assemble a comprehensive set of the relevant literature so far published, focusing on seven technologies: bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS), afforestation and reforestation, direct air carbon capture and storage (DACCS), enhanced weathering, ocean fertilisation, biochar, and soil carbon sequestration. In this part, part 2 of the review, we present estimates of costs, potentials, and side-effects for these technologies, and qualify them with the authors' assessment. Part 3 reviews the innovation and scaling challenges that must be addressed to realise NETs deployment as a viable climate mitigation strategy. Based on a systematic review of the literature, our best estimates for sustainable global NET potentials in 2050 are 0.5–3.6 GtCO₂ yr⁻¹ for afforestation and reforestation, 0.5–5 GtCO₂ yr⁻¹ for BECCS, 0.5–2 GtCO₂ yr⁻¹ for biochar, 2–4 GtCO₂ yr⁻¹ for enhanced weathering, 0.5–5 GtCO₂ yr⁻¹ for DACCS, and up to 5 GtCO2 yr⁻¹ for soil carbon sequestration. Costs vary widely across the technologies, as do their permanency and cumulative potentials beyond 2050. It is unlikely that a single NET will be able to sustainably meet the rates of carbon uptake described in integrated assessment pathways consistent with 1.5 °C of global warming.

772 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article presented the results of a systematic literature review of greenhouse gas emissions for different food categories from life cycle assessment (LCA) studies, to enable streamline calculations that could inform dietary choice.

575 citations