The 21st Show

Carbon pipeline proposal in Illinois

 
Project developers plan to build carbon capture pipelines connecting dozens of Midwestern ethanol refineries. Poet, the country's largest producer of biofuels, operates this refinery in Chancellor, South Dakota, shown on Thursday, July 22, 2021. The company has not indicated whether it will connect its ethanol refineries to the carbon capture pipelines.

Project developers plan to build carbon capture pipelines connecting dozens of Midwestern ethanol refineries. Poet, the country's largest producer of biofuels, operates this refinery in Chancellor, South Dakota, shown on Thursday, July 22, 2021. The company has not indicated whether it will connect its ethanol refineries to the carbon capture pipelines. AP Photo/Stephen Groves

One of the key drivers of global warming are carbon emissions, and one of the ideas for curbing carbon emissions is to store it in the ground. There are a number of projects to do just that here in Illinois, including the proposed Heartland Greenway. A 13-hundred-mile pipeline of steel would connect industrial facilities in South Dakota, Minnesota, Nebraska and Iowa, sending carbon to Illinois, where it would be stored deep underground. But not everyone is enthusiastic about the project — especially some of the landowners in Iowa whose land would be used for the pipeline.

We were joined by an agriculture reporter who's been covering the issue and a scientist from the Illinois State Geological Survey to talk about how these pipelines would work and possible concerns. 

GUESTS

Katie Peikes

Agriculture Reporter at Iowa Public Radio and Harvest Public Media

Sallie Greenberg

Principal Scientist, Energy & Minerals, Illinois State Geological Survey

 

 

Prepared for web by Owen Henderson

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