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"Global warming is a huge issue, but we
also need to recognize the threat posed by resource depletion.
For energy policy to be meaningful, it needs to address both
of those issues. That will mean," says Tokyo Tech's Shuichiro
Hirai (right, pointing toward the Tokyo skyline), "accompanying
scientific research with efforts to engage the community at
large in energy-related initiatives."
Headlines have been announcing for decades that we'll run
out of oil in 30 years," Hirai observes. "Thirty
years has been sort of a continuous horizon, receding continuously
as we have discovered new reserves, as technology has increased
yields from known reserves, and as estimates have simply proved
wrong. But we have reached the point where the end of oil really
is becoming a perceptible eventuality.
"The end of natural gas is also becoming a tangible reality," continues
Hirai, "just a few years further into the future. Even
the finitude of the world's massive coal reserves is increasingly
upon us. And let us bear in mind that our coal consumption
will accelerate as we exhaust our reserves of other fossil
fuels."
Hirai is a professor in Tokyo Tech's Research Center for Carbon
Recycling and Energy. And he heads the university's newly established
Multidisciplinary Education and Research Center for Energy
Science. That center is one of 11 education-and-research group-ings
at Tokyo Tech that receive special government funding as centers
of excellence. It tackles energy-related issues from the dual
perspectives of (1) forestalling global warming and (2) securing
sufficient supplies of energy to ensure the survival and prosperity
of humankind. |
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| "The world is running out of fossil fuels—probably
not in my lifetime, but very possibly during the lifetimes
of my children. We've got to act now to ensure viable supplies
of energy for future generations." |
| Shuichiro
Hirai |
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| Hirai's research group has used
MRI to depict the displacement of water by carbon dioxide
injected into a porous medium. The simulation took place
under conditions comparable to a depth of 800 meters, the
porous medium was Berea sandstone with a pore volume of
1.5 milliliters, and the injection rate was 0.05 milliliters
per minute. Sequestering carbon dioxide in the earth or
in the ocean could help prevent global warming. |
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