  
                           Princeton study tells how to reduce 
                            carbon dioxide 
                          Oct 8, 2007 - Steve Jordon - Omaha 
                            World Herald 
                          A 2004 Science magazine article by two Princeton 
                            University scientists is just now attracting widespread 
                            attention in the global warming field. 
                           Stephen Pacala and Robert Socolow maintained that 
                            proven technology can halt the increase in carbon 
                            dioxide if applied on a large scale over the next 
                            50 years. 
                           The authors divide into seven wedges a chart showing 
                            the projected increase in carbon dioxide, with each 
                            "wedge" representing 1 billion tons of increased annual 
                            carbon emissions. Pacala and Socolow suggest 15 options 
                            for cutting emissions and say there are other possibilities 
                            as well. 
                           The article, cited in the October issue of National 
                            Geographic magazine, said delays will increase the 
                            number of "wedges" needed to prevent carbon dioxide 
                            from building up in the atmosphere.  
                          At the same time, it said, researchers must immediately 
                            increase their work to develop revolutionary technologies 
                            that would reduce carbon production in the second 
                            half of this century.  
                          Among the wedge-reducing options for the coming 50 
                            years: 
                           --Double the average mileage of 2 billion cars (about 
                            four times as many as today) from 30 miles per gallon 
                            to 60 miles per gallon, or reduce their average driving 
                            distance from 10,000 miles to 5,000 miles per year. 
                            Urban planning and telecommuting can help. 
                           --Replace petroleum fuels with 34 million barrels 
                            of ethanol per day, about 50 times current production 
                            and requiring one-sixth of the world's cropland. Using 
                            carbon-based fuel to produce ethanol would reduce 
                            this option's impact. 
                           --Use efficient heating, cooling, lighting and refrigeration 
                            in residential and commercial buildings. About half 
                            of these savings are in developing countries. 
                           --Substitute natural gas for coal to generate electricity, 
                            capturing and storing carbon dioxide emissions and 
                            other fuel substitutions. 
                           --Double the number of nuclear power plants, which 
                            would require restoring public confidence in safety 
                            and waste disposal and international security agreements 
                            on uranium enrichment and plutonium recycling. 
                           --Install 4 million electricity-generating windmills, 
                            100 times the current number. 
                           --To absorb more carbon dioxide, reduce tropical 
                            deforestation to zero and replant forests. 
                           --Expand no-till farming worldwide to reduce plowing 
                            and keep carbon in the soil. 
                          
                            
                          
                              
                             
                          
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