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There is much discussion about a possible climate change that is supposedly caused by the fact that we burn huge amounts
of fossil fuels, producing large CO2 emissions. The Earth has always emitted much CO2, mainly by volcanoes. It is estimated
that volcanoes produce on average 300 million tons of CO2 annually. That raises the question, is all that CO2 now in the
atmosphere, the oceans and the biosphere? If one multiplies 300 million tons of CO2 by the age of the Earth (4.5 billion
years) the result is an absurdly large number. If all that CO2 had remained in the atmosphere, the CO2 pressure would now
be something like 100 Bar and the resulting greenhouse effect would cause a surface temperature of the Earth around 500o
Centigrade. Any life would be impossible. As there is life on Earth, there must be a way in which nature has captured almost
all that CO2 and stored it somewhere safely. In mathematics this way of reasoning is called an indirect proof. If there are two
possible solutions for a problem (case 1: there is no process that has removed the CO2, and case 2: there is such a process), but
one of the two leads to a wrong answer, then the other solution must be the right one. It sounds strange to say that everybody
knows that process, without realizing it. It is the weathering of rocks which captures the excess CO2. Weathering is the reaction
of minerals with water and CO2. First the greenhouse gas CO2 is converted to bicarbonate in solution (then it is no longer a
greenhouse gas). In the next step, these bicarbonate solutions are carried by rivers to the oceans, where corals, shellfish and
plankton turn them into carbonate rocks. These are the safe and sustainable storage houses of CO2. Lime stones and dolomites
contain a million times more CO2 than the oceans, the atmosphere and the biosphere together. It is a logical choice to use this
effective process to help us to counter the ongoing climate change. That can be done by enhancing the weathering, by mining
olivine, mill it and spread it over land and shallow seas. There are thousands of times more olivine than we will ever need to
stabilize the climate. Olivine is the commonest mineral in the Earth, and on every continent in many countries there are vast
deposits of it close to the surface, where they can be mined by opencast mining. As the weathering of olivine has been a process
that has worked well over the whole history of the Earth, it is highly unlikely that it would suddenly cause environmental
problems when we use it to avert climate change.
Biography
R D Schuiling has first worked 4 years as exploration geologist with the Geological Survey of Turkey, after obtaining his Master degree in 1957. He has completed his PhD from Utrecht University and a Post-doctoral year at Princeton University. He was appointed as a Professor of Geochemistry at the Utrecht University in 1972 until his retirement in 1997. He has published more than 300 papers in reputed journals.