Rep. Danny
McCormick is certainly one of the better officials in Baton Rouge, someone who is
not only willing to talk about State sovereignty but also do something to
advance it, which makes us unhappy to have to criticize him. But in this case it is necessary. Rep. McCormick is sponsoring HB783, a bill that
would ensure all property owners receive equal compensation if their property
is taken from them for the sake of a carbon capture project. That sounds nice – equal pay for the little
guy – except for one problem: He should
be rejecting the entire premise the carbon capture ‘industry’ is built upon
instead of trying to normalize it.
It’s fairly
simple to do. There’s only a couple of
key points one has to keep in mind:
· Carbon
dioxide as it is normally emitted by people or machines is not a hazardous
compound (it actually helps
plant growth); and
·
Carbon
capture is an entirely phony business enterprise, being driven and funded
almost completely by federal regulations and debt dollars.
But there
are other considerations apart from these that are also coming to light that
make carbon capture projects less
than desirable.
1. Expansion of carbon capture pipelines will
take up sizeable amounts of land:
The U.S. has a
relatively small network of carbon dioxide pipelines, totaling approximately
5,000 miles and primarily located in the Midwest and Gulf Coast regions.
But to transport
just 15% of the country’s greenhouse gas emissions, the U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) and financial industry project up to 96,000 miles of new pipelines
may be required — enough to cross the continental U.S. 32 times, coast to
coast.
2. Highly concentrated CO2 (which is the state
it is usually in when travelling through carbon capture pipeline systems) is a
health hazard, as demonstrated by a carbon pipeline rupture:
In 2020, a
rupture in a Denbury Enterprises carbon dioxide pipeline in Satartia, Mississippi,
led to a mass asphyxiation event, causing people to become disoriented and
unresponsive, with some even losing consciousness.
As hundreds
attempted to flee the area, vehicles stalled and shut down, because internal
combustion engines require oxygen.
. .
.
The rest is
at https://thehayride.com/2024/05/garlington-reject-dont-reform-carbon-capture/.
--
Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us
sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!
Anathema to the Union!
No comments:
Post a Comment