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Japan Earth Power Science

Can Japan Burn Flammable Ice For Energy? (cnn.com) 153

dryriver writes: Japan is a country that currently has to import 90% of its fuels for energy generation, having very little in the way of oil, coal or natural gas reserves in the country. Since the Fukushima disaster, its 50-plus nuclear reactors have been mostly idle. This makes Japan one of the least self-sufficient countries in terms of energy generation in the developed world. But there is an untapped energy resource that Japan has in abundance: ice that has large quantities of methane trapped in it. These ice crystals hold a remarkable quantity of natural methane gas. It is estimated that one cubic meter of frozen gas hydrate contains 164 cubic meters of methane. Japan has so far spent over $1 billion on research and development efforts in order to find a way to efficiently extract the methane from the ice. Where is this methane rich ice located? Engineers have so far focused on Nankai Trough, a long, narrow depression 50 kilometers off the coast of central Japan, which had been extensively surveyed over many years. Analysis of extracted core samples and seismic data has revealed that 1.1 trillion cubic meters of methane -- enough to meet Japan's gas needs for more than a decade -- lies below the floor of the trough. Some experts think that if an efficient method is found to extract methane from flammable ice, it could change the energy map of the entire world. Flammable ice has either been found, or is suspected to be present in large quantities, off the coastlines of all 5 continents in the world (the linked article has a map showing the currently known locations). Ten years from now the price of energy around the world may thus not be set by how much oil, coal or natural gas costs at that point in time, but rather by how much methane extraction from flammable ice costs.
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Can Japan Burn Flammable Ice For Energy?

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  • It is all frozen, burn methane, more global warming easier to melt those ices ... wow
    • by Anonymous Coward

      methane is an excellent âoefeedstockâ gas for many useful compounds. Burning it may not be on the menu, but there are plenty of highly useful things we can do with it.

      Iâ(TM)m a lot more comfortable converting the methane to plastic & immediately dump it in the ocean than let the methane ice melt. Iâ(TM)m sure there are considerably better options than that.

    • by robbak ( 775424 ) on Wednesday November 01, 2017 @11:11PM (#55473963) Homepage

      The Clathrate Gun Hypothesis [wikipedia.org] is the scary climate change idea, that we will heat up the planet until methane trapped in arctic soils and clathrates will start to be released, and, as methane is a really bad greenhouse gas, results in more warming, triggering the release of more methane, and forming a fast, tight positive feedback loop.

      It's a really scary prospect.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Since the human race has proven to be absolutely incapable and unwilling to deal with climate change, it is to be expected that this effect will happen. The bad thing is that those that will get killed will be the ones that are the least to blame.

      • The Clathrate Gun Hypothesis [wikipedia.org] is the scary climate change idea, that we will heat up the planet until methane trapped in arctic soils and clathrates will start to be released, and, as methane is a really bad greenhouse gas, results in more warming, triggering the release of more methane, and forming a fast, tight positive feedback loop.

        It's a really scary prospect.

        Sounds like we should burn it then.

        • by Rob Y. ( 110975 )

          Actually, it sounds more like if it ever gets to the point where warming causes it to be released into the atmosphere - we've lost, and burning it won't help.

          I suppose burning some of it now - as opposed to burning coal or methane extracted by fracking - is better than just continuing to burn coal and oil. But if we don't prevent the natural release of the frozen stuff, we're in serious trouble. And this isn't going to be nearly enough to stop that.

      • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

        What's even more scary is the resulting ocean acidification killing ocean life which then rots and releases toxic gases which kill most land life. It's happened before, and it very much looks like it's about to happen again right now.

      • And we passed that point in 2004

  • Once we cross certain threshold, all the remaining "flamable ice" will melt, and since methane is one of the most efficient greenhouse gas, we will turn Earth into second Venus.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      That is what I was thinking too. But they signed the Paris Accord so that would mean they are being dishonest about their commitment to reducing greenhouse gasses. We all know that signatories to the accord have cut their greenhouse gas emissions already. Except for the US, which didn't sign the accord and has been increasing their greenhouse gas output every year. Oh wait, it is the opposite? Carry on.
    • second venus is unlikely as that requires over 3000ppm.

      But unpleasant with a lower carrying capacity than our current population due to lower food production - sure.

    • Yes, because that has happened in the previous interglacial periods as well... no?
      • The previous interglacial periods haven't had as much CO2 in the air as we're putting in there.

  • by aberglas ( 991072 ) on Wednesday November 01, 2017 @11:04PM (#55473941)

    The 2011 Thoku tsunami killed some 16,000 people. Dead now.

    The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear "disaster" killed Zero people directly. Maybe a dozen will die eventually. Maybe.

    So you would think that the focus would be on tsunami protection. Better walls, better alerts etc.

    But instead, it is on the nuclear "disaster". Which only happened as a result of a freak event. And lessons learned meant that the same would not happen again.

    But they close down 50 nuclear plants. At huge cost.

    Knee jerk reaction based on political perceptions and column inches of news print rather than any rational analysis.

    • Nuclear power is definitely the answer to our current power problems. Fusion is hopefully eventually the answer but regular old fission is orders of magnitude more safe and more efficient than anything else we have. A "person" is smart, "people" are just absolutely dumbfuckery stupid.

      • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday November 02, 2017 @01:19AM (#55474421)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • That's great to use that kind of fusion power but it has a nasty habit of "going down for maintenance" every day.

          If you can figure out how to keep that energy flowing 24/7 then you might have an argument. Otherwise it's more of a novelty.

    • by Uberbah ( 647458 ) on Thursday November 02, 2017 @12:32AM (#55474241)

      The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear "disaster" killed Zero people directly. Maybe a dozen will die eventually. Maybe.

      Maybe you're getting figures from the same people who say drones have only killed 100 civilians. But putting the issue of deaths aside completely, nuclear power is unjustifiable based on cost alone.

      It simply costs too much to build, to maintain, to secure, to decommission, and that's before getting to storing the waste for thousands of years. For the same startup cost you can build out wind and solar generation in a fraction of the time with none of the long term liabilities, and that's including pumped storage facilities [wikipedia.org] to neutralize the baseline canard that is invariably brought up when discussing wind and solar.

      • and that's including pumped storage facilities to neutralize the baseline canard that is invariably brought up when discussing wind and solar.

        Sorry, but bullshit. That wind and solar cannot provide base power isn't a canard - it's a cold hard fact. What's a canard is the nonsensical belief that pumped storage is a magic wand and a universal solution that solves this problem. It isn't. It's very expensive, causes significant ecological damage, limited in applicability, and it's limited in total capacity

        • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

          It's not a fact if you spread the wind turbines over a large enough area, something that the north America, Europe and China should all be able to do.

        • https://skepticalscience.com/r... [skepticalscience.com]

          FYI The baseload power argument has been wrong for over a decade now. Those who still make it are either horribly out of touch, shills, or just in denial.

          Based on the other things you've said, you might belong in the "shill" bin.
          =Smidge=

        • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

          That wind and solar cannot provide base power isn't a canard - it's the definition of bullshit

          FTFY

          All you have to do with wind and solar is space out generating capacity across the grid - exactly as you would do with nuclear power. And excess wind and solar power can be transmitted hundreds of miles over power lines or pumped into artificial reservoirs to be used for hydroelectric power as needed - exactly as you would for nuclear power.

          Or did you miss the fact that the Ludington Pumped Storage Power Plan

      • Without arguing over your statement about whether it's justifiable to build a nuclear power plant, it is absolutely bonkers to idle an already constructed and operational nuclear power plant.

        • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

          it is absolutely bonkers to idle an already constructed and operational nuclear power plant.

          If you're bonkers enough to ignore the billions in operational & security costs, insurance & disaster preparedness, and decomissioning before even broaching the subject of where you're going to store the waste for the next hundred generations...

      • It simply costs too much to build

        If only there were 50 built reactors somewhere.

    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      Knee jerk reaction based on political perceptions and column inches of news print rather than any rational analysis.

      Welcome to Earth. You must be new here. How does your planet solve this?

    • by mattr ( 78516 )

      It must be fun to comfortably pontificate from your armchair.
      I believe there were some deaths or sicknesses in the people who were cleaning up the plutonium that was lying on the ground, which is an utterly horrifying thought.
      There were a lot of deaths due to the tsunami itself. You can't feasibly build walls against them.
      However the actual leakage of nuclear fuel into the environment is so scarily toxic that you have no way to know if you are correct about minimizing the danger.
      As it happens the freak even

    • "Maybe"? Several workers doing the cleanup were killed.

      • Citation please. Wikipedia says Zero.

        • https://news.vice.com/article/... [vice.com]

          This is the third recorded death at the stricken Fukushima plant since the start of the decommissioning work. In March 2014, a laborer at the plant was killed after being buried under gravel while digging, and in January 2015, a worker died after falling inside a water storage tank.

          Oh, by the way
          http://www.telegraph.co.uk/new... [telegraph.co.uk]

          • Someone falling into a water tank, or getting buried in gravel, are industrial accidents. They were doing cleanup from damage after an earthquake and tsunami. Things like that happen at any power plant or other industrial site, had it been a coal plant or wind farm we'd still see things like that happen.

            The diagnosis of leukemia is not a death, the guy is still alive. He's also got risk factors for leukemia, such as being male, over 40, and of Asian ancestry. No doubt working at a nuclear power plant is

    • by Idou ( 572394 )

      Knee jerk reaction based on political perceptions

      Unlike the knee jerk reaction to post "what about nuclear power" to any article that even hints at the word "energy" due to one's own fanboy perception?

      Not telling anyone to stop. . . just calling it what it is. . .

    • The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear "disaster" killed Zero people directly.

      Sure... if we pretend to ignore the fact that rad-detectors were being taken offline while that shit circled the globe. You're either a paid shill or a naive, gullible idiot but either way, you can take your "official narrative," fold it so it's all corners and shove it up your ass.

    • Tohoku, btw.
    • by Megane ( 129182 )

      The 2011 Thoku tsunami

      That's what you get for trying to be all fancy with Unicode, when using the original Japanese "ou" spelling works more than well enough. People who insist on using o-macron are just too smug for their own good.

    • The lesson learned was that you can't stop the melt-down and to prevent another you must close down the nuclear plants. Seems like they did learn a lesson and don't intend to let that event happen again.
  • 10 years from now (Score:4, Interesting)

    by JustNiz ( 692889 ) on Wednesday November 01, 2017 @11:33PM (#55474041)

    >> Ten years from now the price of energy around the world may be set by how much methane extraction costs.

    This is a very naive statement. The cost of energy (or anything else) has never been set by how much it costs to produce, it's only ever set by how much they can get away with charging for it.

  • by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Thursday November 02, 2017 @02:34AM (#55474567)

    one cubic meter of frozen gas hydrate contains 164 cubic meters of methane

    Sounds like Americans have some problems working with the metric units.

    • by Khyber ( 864651 )

      Sounds like you failed basic high school chemistry/physics. Specifically the part about states of matter.

      • Sounds like in that case they omitted to specify the "state of matter" ...
        • by Khyber ( 864651 )

          Sounds like you failed basic chemistry and physics and reading comprehension, too, because the phases of matter involved were mentioned, directly in the fucking summary.

          "These ice crystals hold a remarkable quantity of natural methane gas."

          Anyone with a brain knows ice is a solid. Gas is already mentioned.

          Take your ass back to school.

  • by duke_cheetah2003 ( 862933 ) on Thursday November 02, 2017 @03:39AM (#55474705) Homepage

    Methane is a very potent greenhouse gas. I already foresee an accident involving this stuff that causes a huge release of methane. Plus, isn't this just more of the same? Burning fossil fuels? Turn the nukes back on, build out solar/wind/whatever else then phase out the nukes.

    • I already foresee an accident involving this stuff that causes a huge release of methane.

      Which naturally resolves itself in 12 years anyway. Speaking of this one-off accident, will it release more or less than 8 Gigatonne CO2 equivalent that we already produce every year?

      Because man if that much methane was released in one go, I'm more concerned about another mushroom cloud being visible over Japan when someone lights up a cigarette.

    • They won't be dumping it directly into the atmosphere, at least not intentionally. When they burn it, it releases carbon dioxide (and water).

      Bear in mind that natural gas is predominantly methane, and it is already cleaner than coal and oil. Being virtually pure methane, this should be slightly better than natural gas. This is definitely better than another mine or oil well.

    • Methane is a hydrocarbon, four atoms of hydrogen and one of carbon. It burns to H2O and CO2. It gets much of its energy from the hydrogen burning, so it supplies more energy for a given amount of CO2. It is a fossil fuel, but it's lots better than coal.

  • to " Should Japan Burn Flammable Ice For Energy?"
    • Pretty sure they figured out that they should burn it if they can get it. The alternatives are to keep importing coal or build new nuclear. Also, it's not like this is an all or nothing choice here, they can mine this clathrate while also building new nuclear. Importing coal is very hard on their economy, and probably not all that helpful to their air quality.

      In the article it looks like they are running into some very real engineering problems in collecting this gas. There is still the question on if t

      • What's wrong with wind and solar?

        The major issue with seabed methane hydrates is that in the course of mining and production most profitably, much methane will be leaked.
        • What's wrong with wind and solar?

          Lot's of things. They are both expensive, unreliable, and take a lot of land area. Sure, they might be able to cover rooftops with solar panels, and put windmills out in the sea, but that adds to the cost.

          A common suggestion to the unreliability problem is spreading out the wind and solar over an area, including underwater cables to friendly nations if that's what it takes. Go look at a map, and read the newspapers, do you see any friendly nations nearby that Japan would want to rely upon for it's energy

        • What's wrong with wind and solar?

          Japan is aggressively expanding wind and solar, but it looks like they need to do more than that. Especially if they want to keep their nuclear reactors idle without relying on imports of foreign fossil fuels.

          In addition to that, natural gas power plants are already widely established. Natural gas is primarily methane, so the distribution and production technology is already very mature. They only have to worry about the extraction technology, and there is robust infrastructure for everything after that poi

  • What I'm thinking, is this the way we might have to power vehicles? Or power stations?...I'm going to assume that methane has become liquefied within the ice to produce that much methane from 1 cubic meter. Not to hard to believe since an English tinkerer used a methane powered car back in the 1960's. He was able to liquefy the gas by just by using a conventional compressor you can by at a store.
  • I can only see one reason why Japan should possibly extract and burn methane ice:

    Methane ice should be extracted only if it meant that the methane would be released into the atmosphere faster if it was not extracted. The process must also not leak excess amounts of methane.

    In other words, the total carbon-equivalent emission of the system must be equal or better than doing nothing at all.

    • Methane contains carbon (CH4), and its combustion produces carbon dioxide and water.

      We already burn methane---that's what natural gas is made of, mostly.

      And methane is a much stronger greenhouse gas than CO2, so if this is an area where the methane might be released due to rising sea temperatures, it will be better to burn it for energy before that happens.

  • As presented this is a colossal opportunity, it could also be a colossally BAD idea. Lets assume we can safely (without release) mine methane clathrates & that we can safely (without releasing CO2) burn same, then why not. But we would still be digging holes into something that has been safely sequestering vast quantities of greenhouse gasses for millennia. Can we be absolutely assured that the act of mining methane clathrates will not result in a destabilization at some point in the distant future tha

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