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About Us
Geotec's New Direction
An
open architecture for the
implementation of Geotec’s
proprietary technology with hydrocarbon,
gasification, and recombinant
genomics technology. This combination has
properties under development
throughout the United States and
in Western Canada. The
properties have coal inventory
in various forms ranging from
reserves through
gob, slurry,
and met coke. Several properties
have permits, some are bonded,
and others have amenities such
as waterway and rail access. The coal
inventory maximized by the
company’s proprietary enzyme
technology, technology acquired
during our asset purchase from
Richcorp, Inc. creates value through a
combination of recombinant
engineering and inductive or
inhibitive proteolytic
chemistry. These technologies
are proven to add value to the
coal by the removal of
substantial amount of
contaminants from the coal and
increase the BTU values (See
test results). Another value add
is the
use of precursor technologies utilized
in the production of the
proteins and enzyme based
solutions which can produce very high
quality ethanol and methanol for
the flex fuel industry.
Geotec through a cooperative effort and the
resources that they have acquired and licensed for their current projects will provide a
viable opportunity to advantage itself along with our strategic alliances to make a
substantial contribution to the alternative and fossil fuel industry and supply needed fuel and electricity
for the industry to meet it's needs. The environmental benefit from the vitrification, or converting
contained contaminants and other
extraneous minerals and metals to glass, while producing pure oxygen and
potable water will have an extremely positive impact on the use of Geotec's
gasification systems along with
those developed by
the U.S. government and many other governments around the world. Gasification
has a tremendous amount of
history, deriving gas from coal is not a new technology and has been used throughout the ages to provide as for
lighting cities prior to the major shift to electricity from gas lighting for
homes and cities during the Victorian Era such as London, New York, Atlanta and
Buenos Aires just to mention a few cities that were lighted by gas derived from
coal. Coal is one of the most abundant fossil fuels available around the world.
Land Remediation
The use of our proprietary
enzyme/protein solution in
conjunction with specifically
designed processes resolves
problems such as acid mine
conditions, heavy metal
contamination, contaminated
slurry ponds and airborne dust
control. Re-vegetation and
reforestation of reclaimed sites
such as slurry ponds and gob
piles is accomplished quicker
and in a more environmentally
friendly manner. If the land is
targeted for subsequent use for
agricultural products then we
can work with the land owner to
provide the most favorable
conditions for the land owner's
selected first crop. We provide
a positive impact on the site as
opposed to remediation by
dilution of the problem. Usually
accomplished by the addition of
alkali fly ash containing
various types of metals and
other contaminants. Then
inundating the land with with
massive amounts of fertilizers
and biomass such as macerated
wood chips and vegetation in order to try and return the
land to original condition. Not
only does this cause problems in
the land's watershed due to high
amounts of phosphorus entering
inland waterways, it also causes
a condition known to farmers as
"Hardpan" or "Diablo"
which can deter root penetration
resulting in poor plant growth
by limiting the nutrient uptake
by the root system.
Carbon
Dioxide Sequestration
A carbon dioxide (CO2)
sink is a
carbon reservoir that
is increasing in size, and is
the opposite of a carbon
"source". The main natural sinks
are (1) the oceans and (2)
plants and other organisms that
use
photosynthesis to
remove carbon from the
atmosphere by incorporating it
into biomass. This concept of CO2
sinks has become more widely
known because of its role in the
Kyoto Protocol.
Carbon sequestration
is the term describing processes
that remove carbon from the
atmosphere. To help
mitigate global warming,
a variety of means of
artificially capturing and
storing carbon -- as well as of
enhancing natural sequestration
processes -- are being explored.

Carbon sequestration from a
fossil-fuel power station
Natural sinks
Forests
Carbon is incorporated into
forests and forest soils by
trees and other plants. Through
photosynthesis,
plants absorb
carbon dioxide from
the
atmosphere, store the
carbon in
sugars,
starch and
cellulose, and
release the
oxygen into the
atmosphere. A young forest,
composed of growing trees,
absorbs carbon dioxide and acts
as a sink. Mature forests, made
up of a mix of various aged
trees as well as dead and
decaying matter, may be carbon
neutral above ground. In the
soil, however, the gradual
buildup of slowly decaying
organic material will continue
to accumulate carbon, but at a
slower rate than an immature
forest. The forest eco-system
may eventually become carbon
neutral. Forest fires release
absorbed carbon back into the
atmosphere.
The dead trees, plants, and moss
in
peat bogs undergo
slow anaerobic decomposition
below the surface of the bog.
This process is slow enough that
in many cases the bog grows
rapidly and fixes more carbon
from the atmosphere than is
released. Over time, the peat
grows deeper. Peat bogs inter
approximately one-quarter of the
carbon stored in land plants and
soils
[1].
Under some conditions, forests
and peat bogs may become sources
of CO2, such as when
a forest is flooded by the
construction of a hydroelectric
dam. Unless the forests and peat
are harvested before flooding,
the rotting vegetation is a
source of CO2 and
methane comparable in magnitude
to the amount of carbon released
by a fossil-fuel powered plant
of equivalent power.
Oceans
Oceans are natural CO2
sinks, and represent the largest
active carbon sink on Earth.
This role as a sink for CO2
is driven by two processes, the
solubility pump and
the
biological pump[1].
The former is primarily a
function of differential CO2
solubility in
seawater and the
thermohaline circulation,
while the latter is the sum of a
series of biological processes
that transport carbon (in
organic and
inorganic forms) from
the surface
euphotic zone to the
ocean's interior. A small
fraction of the organic carbon
transported by the biological
pump to the
seafloor is buried in
anoxic conditions
under sediments and ultimately
forms
fossil fuels such as
oil and
natural gas.
At the present time,
approximately one third[2]
of anthropogenic emissions are
estimated to be entering the
ocean. The solubility pump is
the primary mechanism driving
this, with the biological pump
playing a negligible role. This
stems from the limitation of the
biological pump by ambient light
and nutrients required by the
phytoplankton that
ultimately drive it.
Total inorganic carbon
is not believed to limit
primary production in
the oceans, so its increasing
availability in the ocean does
not directly affect production
(the situation on land is
different, since enhanced
atmospheric levels of CO2
essentially "fertilize" land
plant growth). However,
ocean acidification
by invading anthropogenic CO2
may affect the biological pump
by negatively impacting
calcifying organisms
such as
coccolithophores,
foraminiferans and
pteropods.
Climate change may
also affect the biological pump
in the future by warming and
stratifying the
surface ocean, thus reducing the
supply of limiting nutrients to
surface waters.
Soils
Carbon as plant
organic matter is
sequestered in soils: Soils
contain more carbon than is
contained in vegetation and the
atmosphere combined
[2][3].
Soils' organic carbon (humus)
levels in many agricultural
areas have been severely
depleted.
Grasslands contribute to soil
organic matter, mostly in the
form of roots, and much of this
organic matter can remain
unoxidized for long periods.
Enhancing natural sequestration
Forests
Forests are carbon stores, and
they are carbon dioxide sinks
when they are increasing in
density or area. Thus,
reforestation can mitigate
global warming until all
available land has been
reforested with mature forests[3].
In the United States in 2004
(the most recent year for which
EPA statistics[4]
are available), forests
sequestered 10.6% (637 teragrams[5])
as much carbon dioxide as was
released in the United States by
the combustion of fossil fuels
(coal, oil and natural gas; 5988
teragrams[6]).
Urban trees sequestered another
1.5% (88 teragrams[7]).
To further reduce U.S. carbon
dioxide emissions by 7%, as
stipulated by the
Kyoto Protocol, would
require the planting of "an area
the size of
Texas [8% of the area
of Brazil] every 30 years",
according to William H.
Schlesinger, dean of the
Nicholas School of the
Environment and Earth Sciences
at Duke University, in Durham,
N.C..
Carbon offset
programs are planting millions
of fast-growing trees per year
to reforest tropical lands, for
as little as $0.10 per tree;
over their typical 40-year
lifetime, one million of these
trees will fix 0.9 teragrams of
carbon dioxide[8].
The global cooling effect of
forests is partially
counterbalanced: For example,
the planting of new forests may
initially be a source of
carbon dioxide
emission when carbon from the
soil is released into the
atmosphere. Also, reforestation
can decrease the reflection of
sunlight (albedo):
Mid-to-high latitude forests
have a much lower albedo during
snow seasons than flat ground,
thus contributing to warming.
A long-term sequestration of
carbon from forests comes from
the use of wood products such as
"stick built" (i.e., with
lumber) homebuilding, the
predominant form of home
building in the US. Because most
buildings are eventually
demolished, the carbon may be
released into the atmosphere,
depending upon the fate of the
scrap lumber. Reusing the
lumber, or using it as fuel to
replace a fossil fuel, avoids an
increase in atmospheric carbon.
(In addition to global cooling,
planting forests reduces
erosion, increases water
capture, and provides valuable
timber which may be sustainably
harvested.)
Oceans
One way to increase the carbon
sequestration efficiency of the
oceans is to add micrometre-sized
iron particles called
hematite or iron
sulfate to the water. This has
the effect of stimulating growth
of
plankton. Iron is an
important nutrient for
phytoplankton,
usually made available via
upwelling along the
continental shelves,
inflows from rivers and streams,
as well as deposition of dust
suspended in the
atmosphere. Natural
sources of ocean iron have been
declining in recent decades,
contributing to an overall
decline in ocean productivity
(NASA, 2003). Yet in the
presence of iron nutrients
plankton populations quickly
grow, or 'bloom', expanding the
base of
biomass productivity
throughout the region and
removing significant quantities
of CO2 from the
atmosphere via
photosynthesis. A
test in 2002 in the
Southern Ocean around
Antarctica suggests
that between 10,000 and 100,000
carbon atoms are sunk for each
iron atom added to the water.
More recent work in Germany
(2005) suggests that any biomass
carbon in the oceans, whether
exported to depth or recycled in
the
euphotic zone,
represents long term storage of
carbon. This means that
application of iron nutrients in
select parts of the oceans, at
appropriate scales, could have
the combined effect of restoring
ocean productivity while at the
same time mitigating the effects
of human caused emissions of
carbon dioxide to the
atmosphere.
Those skeptical of this approach
argue that the effect of
periodic small scale
phytoplankton blooms on ocean
ecosystems is unclear, and that
more studies would be helpful.
For example, it is known that
phytoplankton have a complex
effect on cloud formation via
the release of substances such
as
dimethyl sulfide (DMS)
that are converted to sulfate
aerosols in the atmosphere,
providing
cloud condensation nuclei,
or CCN. But the effect of small
scale plankton blooms on overall
DMS production is unknown.
Soils
Since the 1850s, a large
proportion of the world's
grasslands have been tilled and
converted to croplands, allowing
the rapid oxidation of large
quantities of soil organic
carbon. However, in the United
States in 2004 (the most recent
year for which EPA statistics
are available), agricultural
soils including pastureland
sequestered 0.8% (46 teragrams[9])
as much carbon as was released
in the United States by the
combustion of fossil fuels (5988
teragrams[10]).
The annual amount of this
sequestration has been gradually
increasing since 1998[11].
Methods that significantly
enhance carbon sequestration in
soil include
no-till farming,
residue mulching,
cover cropping, and
crop rotation, all of
which are more widely used in
organic farming than
in conventional farming[12][4].
Because only 5% of US farmland
currently uses no-till and
residue mulching, there is a
large potential for carbon
sequestration[13][5].
Conversion to pastureland,
particularly with good
management of grazing, can
sequester even more carbon in
the soil.
Terra preta, an
anthropogenic, high-carbon soil,
is also being investigated as a
sequestration mechanism.
Artificial sequestration
For carbon to be sequestered
artificially (i.e. not using the
natural processes of the carbon
cycle) it must first be
captured, or it must be
significantly delayed or
prevented from being re-released
into the atmosphere (by
combustion, decay, etc.) from an
existing carbon-rich material,
by being incorporated into an
enduring usage (such as in
construction). Thereafter it can
be passively stored or
remain productively utilized
over time in a variety of ways.
For example, upon harvesting,
wood (as a carbon-rich material)
can be immediately burned or
otherwise serve as a fuel,
returning its carbon to the
atmosphere, or it can be
incorporated into construction
or a range of other durable
products, thus sequestering its
carbon over years or even
centuries.
Indeed, a very
carefully-designed and durable,
energy-efficient and
energy-capturing building has
the potential to sequester (in
its carbon-rich construction
materials), as much as or more
carbon than was released by the
acquisition and incorporation of
all its materials and than will
be released by building-function
"energy-imports" during the
structure's (potentially
multi-century) existence. Such a
structure might be termed
"carbon neutral" or even "carbon
positive". The significance of
this becomes apparent in light
of the fact that building
construction and operation is
the source of nearly half
of the annual human-caused
carbon additions to the
atmosphere
[14].
Natural-gas
purification plants often
already have to remove carbon
dioxide, either to avoid
dry ice clogging gas
tankers or to prevent
carbon-dioxide concentrations
exceeding the 3% maximum
permitted on the natural-gas
distribution grid.
Beyond this, one of the most
likely early applications of
carbon capture is the capture of
carbon dioxide from
flue gases at
power stations (in
the case of coal, this is known
as "clean
coal"). A typical new
1000-MW coal-fired power station
produces around 6 million tons
of carbon dioxide annually.
Adding carbon capture to
existing plants can add
significantly to the costs of
energy production; scrubbing
costs aside, a 1000-MW coal
plant will require the storage
of about 50 million
barrels of carbon
dioxide a year. However,
scrubbing is relatively
affordable when added to new
plants based on
coal gasification
technology, where it is
estimated to raise energy costs
for households in the United
States using only coal-fired
electricity sources from 10
cents per kWh to 12
[6].
Carbon capture
Currently, capture of carbon
dioxide is performed on a large
scale by absorption of carbon
dioxide onto various amine-based
solvents. Other techniques are
currently being investigated,
such as pressure and temperature
swing absorption, gas separation
membranes, and cryogenics.
In coal-fired power stations,
the main alternatives to
retrofitting amine-based
absorbers to existing power
stations are two new
technologies:
coal gasification
combined-cycle and
oxyfuel combustion.
Gasification first produces a "syngas"
primarily of hydrogen and carbon
monoxide, which is burned, with
carbon dioxide filtered from the
flue gas. Oxyfuel combustion
burns the coal in
oxygen instead of
air, producing only carbon
dioxide and water vapour, which
are relatively easily separated.
Oxyfuel combustion, however,
produces very high temperatures,
and the materials to withstand
its temperatures are still being
developed.
Another long-term option is
carbon capture directly from the
air using hydroxides. The air
would literally be scrubbed of
its CO2 content. This
idea offers an alternative to
non-carbon-based fuels for the
transportation sector.
Oceans
Another proposed form of carbon
sequestration in the ocean is
direct injection. In this
method, carbon dioxide is pumped
directly into the water at
depth, and expected to form
"lakes" of liquid CO2
at the bottom. Experiments
carried out in moderate to deep
waters (350 - 3600 meters)
indicate that the liquid CO2
reacts to form solid CO2
clathrate hydrates,
which gradually dissolve in the
surrounding waters.
This method, too, has
potentially dangerous
environmental consequences. The
carbon dioxide does react with
the water to form
carbonic acid, H2CO3;
however, most (as much as 99%)
remains as dissolved molecular
CO2. The equilibrium
would no doubt be quite
different under the high
pressure conditions in the deep
ocean. The resulting
environmental effects on
benthic life forms of
the
bathypelagic,
abyssopelagic and
hadopelagic zones are
unknown. Even though life
appears to be rather sparse in
the deep ocean basins, energy
and chemical effects in these
deep basins could have
far-reaching implications. Much
more work is needed here to
define the extent of the
potential problems.
Carbon storage in or under
oceans may not compatible with
the
London Convention (Convention
on the Prevention of Marine
Pollution by Dumping of Wastes
and Other Matter)
[15].
An additional method of
long-term ocean-based
sequestration is to gather crop
residue such as corn stalks or
excess hay into large weighted
bales of biomass and deposit it
in the
alluvial fan areas of
the deep ocean basin. Dropping
these residues in alluvial fans
would cause the residues to be
quickly buried in silt on the
sea floor, sequestering the
biomass for very long time
spans. Alluvial fans exist in
all of the world's oceans and
seas where river deltas fall off
the edge of the continental
shelf such as the Mississippi
alluvial fan in the gulf of
Mexico and the Nile alluvial fan
in the Mediterranean Sea.
Geological sequestration
Also known as
geo-sequestration or
geological storage, this
method involves injecting carbon
dioxide directly into
underground geological
formations. Declining
oil fields, saline
aquifers, and
unminable
coal seams have been
suggested as storage sites.
Caverns and old mines that are
commonly used to store natural
gas are not considered, because
of a lack of storage safety.
CO2 has been injected
into declining oil fields for
more than 30 years, to increase
oil recovery. This option is
attractive because the storage
costs are offset by the sale of
additional oil that is
recovered. Further benefits are
the existing infrastructure and
the geophysical and geological
information about the oil field
that is available from the oil
exploration. All oil fields have
a geological barrier preventing
upward migration of oil. It is
supposed that these geological
barriers will also be sufficient
as long-term barrier to contain
the injected CO2.
Identified possible problems are
the many 'leak' opportunities
provided by old oil wells, the
need for very high pressures
(about 80 times environment
pressure) and low temperatures
(below about 20 degrees Celsius)
to keep the CO2
liquified (only practical very
deep underneath the sea) and the
conversion of CO2
into acids which can damage the
geological barrier. Other
disadvantages of old oil fields
are their geographic
distribution and their limited
capacity.
Unminable coal seams can be used
to store CO2, because
CO2 adsorbs to the
coal surface, ensuring safe
long-term storage. In the
process it releases methane that
was previously adsorbed to the
coal surface and that may be
recovered. Again the sale of the
methane can be used to offset
the cost of the CO2
storage, although release or
burning of methane would of
course at least partially offset
the obtained sequestration
result.
Saline aquifers contain highly
mineralized brines and have so
far been considered of no
benefit to humans except in a
few cases where they have been
used for the storage of chemical
waste. Their advantages include
a large potential storage volume
and relatively common occurrence
reducing the distance over which
CO2 has to be
transported. The major
disadvantage of saline aquifers
is that relatively little is
known about them compared to oil
fields. To keep the cost of
storage acceptable the
geophysical exploration may be
limited, resulting in larger
uncertainty about the structure
of a given acquifer. Unlike
storage in oil fields or coal
beds, no side product will
offset the storage cost. Leakage
of CO2 back into the
atmosphere may be a problem in
saline-aquifer storage. However,
current research shows that
several trapping mechanisms
immobilize the CO2
underground, reducing the risk
of leakage.
A major research project
examining the geological
sequestration of carbon dioxide
is currently being performed at
an oil field at
Weyburn in
southeastern
Saskatchewan. In the
North Sea, Norway's Statoil
natural-gas platform Sleipner
strips carbon dioxide out of the
natural gas with amine solvents
and disposes of this carbon
dioxide by geological
sequestration. Sleipner reduces
emissions of carbon dioxide by
approximately one million tonnes
a year. The cost of geological
sequestration is minor relative
to the overall running costs. As
of April 2005,
BP is considering a
trial of large-scale
sequestration of carbon dioxide
stripped from power plant
emissions in the Miller oilfield
as its reserves are depleted.
Mineral sequestration
Mineral sequestration aims to
trap carbon by placing it in its
thermodynamics groundstate where
it will be nonreactive. This
occurs naturally and is
responsible for much of the
surface limestone. Acids are
used to convert mineral
silicates to mineral carbonates.
Ongoing research aims to speed
up the kinetics of the
reactions.
One proposed reaction is that of
the rock
dunite, or
serpentinite with
carbon dioxide to form the
carbonate mineral magnesite,
plus some silica and magnetite.
This is proposed by ZECA
Corporation, a consortium aiming
to produce a low-emission
coal-fired power source.
Serpentinite sequestration is
favored because of the non-toxic
and predictable nature of
magnesium carbonate. However,
the ideal reaction (reaction 1)
takes place only with extremely
magnesium rich
olivine or
serpentine minerals.
The presence of iron in the
olivine or serpentine will
reduce the efficiency of the
circuit and reactions 2 and 3
must take place, producing a
slag of
silica and iron oxide
(magnetite).
Serpentinite
reactions
Reaction 1
Mg-Olivine + Water + Carbon
dioxide → Serpentine + Magnesite
+ Silica
![(Mg)_2SiO_4 + nH_2O + CO_2 \rarr Mg_3[Si_2O_5(OH)_4] + MgCO_3 + SiO_2 + H_2O](about_us5_files/image003.gif)
Reaction 2
Fe-Olivine + Water + Carbonic
acid → Serpentine + Magnetite +
Magnesite + Silica
![4(Fe,Mg)_2SiO_4 + nH_2O + H_2CO_3 \rarr 2Mg_3[Si_2O_5(OH)_4] + 2Fe_3O_4 + 2MgCO_3 + SiO_2 + H_2O](about_us5_files/image004.gif)
Reaction 3
Serpentine + carbon dioxide →
Magnesite + silica + water
![Mg_3[Si_2O_5(OH)_4] + 3CO_2 \rarr 3MgCO_3 + 2SiO_2 + 2H_2O](about_us5_files/image005.gif)
Carbon sinks and the Kyoto
Protocol
Because growing vegetation
absorbs
carbon dioxide, the
Kyoto Protocol allows countries
that have large areas of forest
(or other vegetation) to deduct
a certain amount from their
emissions, thus making it easier
for them to achieve the desired
net emission levels.
Some countries want to be able
to trade in emission rights in
carbon emission markets, to make
it possible for one country to
buy the benefit of carbon
dioxide sinks in another
country. If overall limits on
greenhouse gas emission are put
into place, such a
"cap-and-trade" market mechanism
will tend to find cost-effective
ways to reduce emissions[16].
There is as yet no
carbon audit regime
for all such markets globally,
and none is specified in the
Kyoto Protocol. Each
nation is on its own to verify
actual carbon emission
reductions, and to account for
carbon sequestration using some
less formal method.
In the
Clean Development Mechanism,
only
afforestation and
reforestation are
eligible to produce CERs in the
first commitment period of the
Kyoto Protocol
(2008–2012). Forest conservation
activities or activities
avoiding
deforestation, which
would result in emission
reduction through the
conservation of existing carbon
stocks, are not eligible at this
time
[7].
Also agricultural carbon
sequestration is not possible
yet
[8].
1.
^
Raven, J. A., P. G. Falkowski
(1999). "Oceanic sinks for
atmospheric CO2".
Plant Cell & Environment
22: 741-755.
2.
^
Takahashi, T., S. C. Sutherland,
C. Sweeney, A. Poisson, N. Metzl,
B. Tilbrook, N. Bates, R.
Wanninkhof, R. A. Feely, C.
Sabine, J. Olafsson and Y. C.
Nojiri (2002). "Global sea-air
CO2 flux based on
climatological surface ocean
pCO2,
and seasonal biological and
temperature effects".
Deep Sea Research II
49: 1601-1622.
3.
^
Swift, Roger S., Soil Science,
166(11):858-871, November 2001.
4.
^
Pimentel, David, et al,
Bioscience: 55:7, July 2005
5.
^
Lal, R, et al (April 2004).
"Managing Soil Carbon".
Science
304: 393.
6.
^
Scientific American,
July 2005, p42
7.
^
Manguiat, M. S. Z., Verheyen,
R., Mackensen, J. & Scholz, G.
(2005), Legal aspects in the
implementation of CDM forestry
projects, number 59 in ‘IUCN
Environmental Policy and Law
Papers’, IUCN. Available from:
http://www.iucn.org/themes/law/pdfdocuments/EPLP59EN.pdf
8.
^
Rosenbaum, K. L., Schoene, D. &
Mekouar, A. (2004), Climate
change and the forest sector.
Possible national and
subnational legislation,
number 144 in ‘FAO Forestry
Papers’, FAO. Available from:
http://www.fao.org/docrep/007/y5647e/y5647e00.HTM
References
Research
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