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		Swiss study aims to find out if carbon 
		dioxide can be locked in rock 
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		 [May 08, 2019] 
		By Marina Depetris 
 SAINT-URSANNE, Switzerland (Reuters) - 
		Swiss scientists are injecting carbon dioxide into rock deep inside a 
		mountain to discover if the gas leaks out or if it can be locked away to 
		stop it contributing to climate change.
 
 Inside Mont Terri in the Jura Mountains, a layer of impermeable clay 
		could potentially trap carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas causing 
		global warming.
 
 At a laboratory deep inside the mountain, scientists have begun pumping 
		carbon dioxide dissolved in salt water into the rock. They will see if 
		the gas will interact with the clay and whether a faultline will allow 
		it to seep out.
 
 The first eight-month phase of the experiment involves a tiny volume of 
		carbon dioxide (CO2), with 500mg of carbon dioxide pumped into the rock 
		through a borehole.
 
		
		 
		
 "If this rock has a fault in it, is it possible that the CO2 comes up 
		through the fault. This is what we want to answer," said chief 
		investigator Alba Zappone, a researcher at Zurich's ETH University.
 
 Geological storage of CO2 already exists, but existing sites are usually 
		in uninhabited places, such as the Algerian desert or under the 
		Norwegian North Sea, said Christophe Nussbaum, the Mont Terri project 
		manager.
 
 "What is new here is that, if one day we want to stock CO2 in 
		Switzerland, which is a densely populated region, we need to make sure 
		that the CO2 won't migrate into the surface and contaminate, for 
		instance, drinking water sources. This is really one of the major stakes 
		here," Nussbaum said.
 
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			Christophe Nussbaum, Project Manager shows a one-meter wide fault in 
			Opalinus Clay during a media visit of a CO2 storage experiment in 
			the Mont Terri underground laboratory in St-Ursanne, Switzerland May 
			2, 2019. REUTERS/Marina Depetris 
            
 
            Swiss citizens produce an average of about 5.8 tonnes of CO2 
			annually, he said.
 The project is supported by Switzerland, France, Canada, Japan and 
			the United States, as well as energy firms Total, Chevron, ENI and 
			BP.
 
 But environmental organizations like Greenpeace are worried that the 
			project's findings could turn into a "right to pollute" and detract 
			from efforts to reduce emissions, which are driving a disastrous 
			rise in global temperatures.
 
 "What worries us is not only that these technologies are being 
			developed, but to see that in the meantime the necessary efforts 
			needed to limit greenhouse gas emissions are not being made," said 
			Mathias Schlegel, spokesman for Greenpeace Switzerland.
 
 (Reporting by Marina Depetris, writing by Tom Miles, Editing by 
			Angus MacSwan)
 
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