Print

CO2 waste bid may cut gas emissions

24 April 2008 12:00am

A new way of disposing of waste carbon dioxide could reduce the UK's greenhouse gas emissions by 4%, researchers claim.

Scientists at the University of Newcastle pioneered the technique, which converts CO2 into chemical compounds known as cyclic carbonates.

The team estimates that the process could potentially get rid of 48 million tonnes of waste carbon dioxide per year.

Cyclic carbonates are widely used in the manufacture of solvents, paint-strippers, biodegradable packaging, and are used in the chemical industry.

They can also be used to make "anti-knocking" agents which help petrol burn more efficiently, leading to further reductions in CO2 emissions.

The technique depends on a new highly active catalyst derived from aluminium which drives a chemical reaction.

Professor Michael North, who led the research, said: "If our catalyst could be employed at the source of high-concentration CO2 production, for example in the exhaust stream of a fossil-fuel power station, we could take out the carbon dioxide, turn it into a commercially-valuable product and at the same time eliminate the need to store waste CO2."

He compared the process with what happens inside a catalytic converter fitted to a car.

Prof North added: "To satisfy the current market for cyclic carbonates, we estimate that our technology could use up to 18 million tonnes of waste CO2 per year, and a further 30 million tonnes if it is used as an anti-knocking agent.

"Using 48 million tonnes of waste CO2 would account for about 4% of the UK's CO2 emissions, which is a pretty good contribution from one technology."