客服中心 | 代理专区 | 网站地图 | 公司简介
当前位置:亿城英语 -> 英语听力大全 -> 2004 -> VOA标准英语 -> 健康科技 -> Texas Scientists Work to Reduce Carbon Dioxide Air


 

By Greg Flakus
 
Scientists in Texas are trying to find a way of reducing carbon dioxide air pollution by capturing the gas, compressing it and then putting it underground. This technique could also yield some benefits for the oil industry by using the gas to force out previously unrecoverable crude.
In a field northeast of Houston, a team of geologists from the University of Texas, four national scientific laboratories and a number of private companies are pumping CO2, or carbon dioxide, into sandstone deposits 1,500 meters below ground. Such attempts at what is known as carbon sequestration are not new. In fact, reducing greenhouse gases such as CO2 in the atmosphere has been a major goal of environmentalists for many years. But Susan Hovorka, a researcher in the Bureau of Economic Geology at the University of Texas at Austin, says this is the first attempt to carefully measure how effective an underground storage strategy might be.
"We are really the first really detailed experiment," said Susan Hovorka. "We have four national labs and the U.S. Geological Survey collecting very detailed measurements with a lot of tools. So, it is a first."
Ms. Hovorka, who serves as the lead researcher at the site near Dayton, Texas, says the effectiveness of this project relies on the rock formations deep in the earth below the field where the scientists are working. She says various types of rock can form a cap over the deposit to prevent almost all leakage.
"There are a lot of things that can hold gas underground," she said. "We are underneath the Anahuac shale, which should be the best seal in the world. So the CO2 should stay underground for thousands of years. No problem."
Ms. Hovorka says carbon dioxide is plentiful in nature and a small amount of leakage from the underground storage site will cause no problem. She says it is the large amounts of CO2 put into the atmosphere by nearby petroleum refineries and factories that cause health problems and contribute to global warming.
In areas like east Texas and Louisiana, which still have many active oil fields, there can be another benefit from pumping carbon dioxide underground. Susan Hovorka says the gas helps move oil out of regions in the porous rock that had defied earlier attempts at extraction.
"The oil is stuck in the pore spaces and the CO2 will act as a solvent to help move it out," explained Susan Hovorka. "So, you can get several decades more life out of a field ending its life."
This use of gas to produce oil could be especially important for future development of greenhouse gas sequestration plans because of the costs involved. Removing carbon dioxide from fossil fuel fumes is an expensive process in itself.
Compressing thousands of tons of that gas into containers and then shipping it to the storage sites to pump it into the ground costs even more. But scientists hope the experiment now under way here in Texas will lead to a cost-effective system for reducing air pollution that can be applied elsewhere in the world as well.
Greg Flakus, VOA News, Houston

注释:
compress 压缩 
underground 地下
Houston 休斯顿
environmentalist 环境论者
Bureau of Economic Geology at the University of Texas美国德克萨斯州立大学经济地质局
Austin 奥斯汀
Dayton 代顿(美国俄亥俄州西南部城市)
deposit 沉淀物, 堆积
leakage 泄漏
porous 能渗透的
sequestration 隔离



声明:
这里只提供从网络公开资源收集的低精度英语听力和英语口语语音试听,完全免费供广大英语爱好者试用。我们不保证文章内容一定是完整和正确的。您如需要完整和高精度的语音产品,请在相应的音像书店购买正版产品和教材。除标明的外,这里的语音内容的版权属于原版权所有人。如果试学感觉好,请支持正版!英语听力部分页面可能缺少文本或者语音,请反馈到客服信箱;文字内容仅供英语学习者参考,英语听力音频内容仅供低精度在线试听(不提供下载)。若您打开页面后看不到Realplayer播放框,有可能是没有安装Realplayer播放器,请点这里下载并安装。





北京数码轻舟科技发展有限公司版权所有 ICP京050055号 客服电话:(010)62535917
地址:北京市海淀区成府路35号北楼119室 邮编:100083 传真:(010)62535917
联系我们: 客服邮箱: