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Identifying the most (cost-)efficient regions for CO2 removal with Iron Fertilization in the Southern Ocean
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  • Lennart Thomas Bach,
  • Veronica M Tamsitt,
  • Kimberlee Baldry,
  • Jeffrey McGee,
  • Emmanuel C. Laurenceau-Cornec,
  • Strzepek Robert,
  • Yinghuan Xie,
  • Boyd Philip
Lennart Thomas Bach
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Veronica M Tamsitt
University of South Florida St. Petersburg
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Kimberlee Baldry
2. Institute of Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania
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Jeffrey McGee
Faculty of Law, University of Tasmania
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Emmanuel C. Laurenceau-Cornec
CNRS, University of Western Brittany
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Strzepek Robert
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania
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Yinghuan Xie
University of Tasmania
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Boyd Philip
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania
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Abstract

Abstract
Ocean Iron Fertilization (OIF) aims to remove carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere by stimulating phytoplankton carbon-fixation and subsequent deep ocean carbon sequestration in iron-limited oceanic regions. Transdisciplinary assessments of OIF have revealed overwhelming challenges around the detection and verification of carbon sequestration and wide-ranging environmental side-effects, thereby dampening enthusiasm for OIF. Here, we utilize 5 requirements that strongly influence whether OIF can lead to atmospheric CO2 removal (CDR): The requirement (1) to use preformed nutrients from the lower overturning circulation cell; (2) for prevailing Fe-limitation; (3) for sufficient underwater light for photosynthesis; (4) for efficient carbon sequestration; (5) for sufficient air-sea CO2 transfer. We systematically evaluate these requirements using observational, experimental, and numerical data to generate circumpolar maps of OIF (cost-)efficiency south of 60°S. Results suggest that (cost-)efficient CDR is restricted to locations on the Antarctic Shelf. Here, CDR costs can be <100 US$/tonne CO2 while they are mainly >>1000 US$/tonne CO2 in offshore regions of the Southern Ocean, where mesoscale OIF experiments have previously been conducted. However, sensitivity analyses underscore that (cost-)efficiency is in all cases associated with large variability and are thus difficult to predict, which reflects our insufficient understanding of the relevant biogeochemical and physical processes. While OIF implementation on Antarctic shelves appears most (cost-)efficient, it raises legal questions because regions close to Antarctica fall under 3 overlapping layers of international law. Furthermore, the constraints set by efficiency and costs reduce the area suitable for OIF, thereby likely reducing its maximum CDR potential.
21 Mar 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
26 Mar 2023Published in ESS Open Archive