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creativeSlumber | 2 months ago
That enclosure has a huge volume - area the size of several football fields, and at least 15 stories high. The article says it holds 2k tons of co2, which is ~1,000,000 cubic meters in volume.
CO2 is denser than air will pool closer to the ground, and will suffocate anyone in the area.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Nyos_disaster
Edit: It holds 2k tons, not 20K tons.
jaggederest|2 months ago
If it were, say, argon, it would be much more likely to suffocate people, because you don't notice hypoxia the way you do hypercapnia. It can pool in basements and kill everyone who enters.
That being said it is an enormous volume of CO2, so the hypercapnic response in this case may not be sufficient if there's nowhere to flee to, as sadly happened in the Lake Nyos disaster you cited.
Gud|2 months ago
Hnrobert42|2 months ago
It would not be good, but it wouldn't be Bhopal. And there are still plenty of factories making pesticides.
creativeSlumber|2 months ago
Also that statement of 70 meters seem very off, looking at the size of the building. What leads to suffocation is the inability to remove co2 from your body rather than lack of oxygen, and thus can be life threatening even at 4% concentration. It should impact a much much larger area.
Animats|2 months ago
How did they calculate that evacuation distance? CO2 is heavy. That little house about 15m from the bubble needs to be acquired.
The topography matters. If the installation is in a valley, a dome rip could make air unbreathable, because the CO2 will settle at the bottom. People have been killed by CO2 fire extinguishing systems. It takes a reasonably high concentration, a few percent, but that can happen. They need alarms and handy oxygen masks.
Installations like this probably will be in valleys, because they will be attached to wind farms. The wind turbines go in the high spots and the energy storage goes in the low spots.
kumarvvr|2 months ago
Easy to build infra and other stuff that far away, especially in locations where this is meant to be used.
There are many aspects of safety
1. If the puncture is due to hurricanes, etc, the danger is non existent. The hurricane will blow away the co2 in no time.
2. If the puncture is due to wear and tear, then the leak will be concentrated and localized. It could naturally diffuse.
CO2 meters can be installed around the unit for indication.
Oxygen masks can be placed around the facility for emergency use.
The dangers are very much mitigatable.
microtherion|2 months ago
pjc50|2 months ago
andrewflnr|2 months ago
unknown|2 months ago
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tonfa|2 months ago
SoftTalker|2 months ago
Anyone in the local vicinity would need to carry emergency oxygen at all times to be able to get to a safe distance in case of rupture. Otherwise it's a death sentence, and not a particularly pleasant one as CO2 is the signal that triggers the feeling of suffocation.
quotemstr|2 months ago
Natural gas is naturally odorless and colorless. Therefore, by default, it can accumulate to dangerous levels without anyone noticing until too late. We make natural gas safer by making stink, and we make it stink by adding trace amounts of "odorizers" like thiophane to it.
I wonder whether we could do something similar for CO2 working fluid this facility uses --- make it visible and/or "smell-able" so that if a leak does happen, it's easier to react immediately and before the threshold of suffocation is reached. Odorizers are also dirt cheap. Natural gas industry goes through tons of the stuff.
amelius|2 months ago