Friday, March 8, 2019

Cool Gaia and Save Ocean Treaty & Cool Gaia Fund

Very thorough, if generating far more need to make industrial projects in fairly odd places. (Well, not TOO odd, quite sensible from a 'whole planet' perspective.)



One highly-overlooked CO2 market possibility is in putting out fires. Once you compress it and store it, (it might take a year to let it cool through the walls of a railroad tanker, for instance, or inflating a bag exposed to night air) it could be a valuable future firefighting tool. (It's heavier than air and very cold upon release. Add gels.) Hawaii & Arizona were home to shallow ponds where CO2 was bubbled through the water, using the sunlight to 'full efficiency'. (oil from various 'bugs')

Remelted plastics (possibly collected from ocean surface) could be made into floats carrying Iron and other nutrients and dropped into the 'dead zones' of the ocean, where each atom would remove over 500 Carbon atoms (in new life forms) for at least 100-200 years (but mostly forever if they fall to ocean floor).



What better use for desert sunlight than desalinization? All that's required is a pipeline carrying salt water and segregated wastes, and a few people to operate desalinators. (They'll get inefficient very quickly without care.) Probably not a bad place to raise nut trees for other oil needs either.

Judy Wright, BSME (CMU 1969), MSSE, S. F., Futurist.

judywright4407@yahoo.com    seiwizard.com  think@onemindrestoration.org

Thursday, March 7, 2019

Cool Gaia and Save Ocean Treaty & Cool Gaia Fund

Very thorough, if generating far more need to make industrial projects in fairly odd places. (Well, not TOO odd, quite sensible from a 'whole planet' perspective.)



One highly-overlooked CO2 market possibility is in putting out fires. Once you compress it and store it, (it might take a year to let it cool through the walls of a railroad tanker, for instance, or inflating a bag exposed to night air) it could be a valuable future firefighting tool. (It's heavier than air and very cold upon release. Add gels.) Hawaii & Arizona were home to shallow ponds where CO2 was bubbled through the water, using the sunlight to 'full efficiency'. (oil from various 'bugs')

Remelted plastics (possibly collected from ocean surface) could be made into floats carrying Iron and other nutrients and dropped into the 'dead zones' of the ocean, where each atom would remove over 500 Carbon atoms (in new life forms) for at least 100-200 years.



What better use for desert sunlight than desalinization? All that's required is a pipeline carrying salt water and segregated wastes, and a few people to operate desalinators. (They'll get inefficient very quickly without care.) Probably not a bad place to raise nut trees for other oil needs either.

Judy Wright, BSME (CMU 1969), MSSE, S. F., Futurist.

judywright4407@yahoo.com    seiwizard.com  think@onemindrestoration.org