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Midwest AgEnergy Explores Underground Carbon Storage

Company wants to capture carbon dioxide emitted from its Dakota Spirit ethanol plant near Jamestown

PIXABAY
PIXABAY

An ethanol producer wants to figure out if the geology is right in eastern North Dakota to store carbon emissions underground, as is planned in the western part of the state, reports the Fairfield Citizen.

Midwest AgEnergy is hoping to build a system to capture the carbon dioxide emitted from its Dakota Spirit ethanol plant east of Jamestown, about 100 miles east of the North Dakota-Minnesota border, and bury it in rocks a few thousand feet below the earth’s surface.

That process, known as carbon storage or sequestration, has gained huge interest among the state’s ethanol and coal industries, mostly in central and western North Dakota. That section of the state has rock layers that are deep and thick enough to potentially store a plume of carbon dioxide.

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