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[SGC36-06] Carbon mineralization potential for climate change mitigation in Oman and Pakistan
Keywords:Carbon Mineralization, CO2 Sequestration, Climate Change, Ultramafic Rocks, Carbonate Minerals, Oman Ophiolite
Natural carbon mineralization (CM, image 1) involves the storage of atmospheric CO2 as solid carbonates through the carbonation of ultramafic rocks (Ali et al., 2021). Such rocks are abundantly available worldwide (e.g., 60-600 trillion tons; Fox, 2021), offering a huge opportunity for the CM, as evidenced by two pilot projects: CarbFix (95% of the injected 250 tons of CO2 turned into carbonate mineral within 2 years, Matter et al., 2016) and Wallulla (Signe et al., 2020). We recommend that the IPCC recognize the CM as a potential mitigation approach and that it be thoroughly discussed at the upcoming COP27 in Egypt for potential pilot project sites, including Oman, Pakistan, Alaska, Canada, California, New Zealand, and Japan. Here we focus on Oman and Pakistan because ophiolite units in both countries belong to the Late Cretaceous Tethyan Ophiolite Belt (Pearce, 1980). Oman offers 15000 km3 of mantle rocks (i.e., ultramafic rocks with Mg-, Ca-, and Fe-rich minerals) called the Oman Ophiolite, having roughly 3 km of thickness (Fox, 2021). Similarly, Pakistan hosts several ophiolite units at the NW margin of the Indian continent via the Waziristan-Muslimbagh-Bela Ophiolite suture zone, spanning an area of > 5000 km2 (Siddiqui et al., 1996, Zaigham and Mallick, 2000, Kakar et al., 2014). The Oman Ophiolite is mainly comprised of olivine-rich peridotites, unlike Pakistan's ophiolite units, where peridotites are metamorphosed extensively into serpentine (Kakar et al., 2014), which has a higher carbon capture potential than olivine (Lacinska et al., 2017; Sandalow et al., 2020).
Oman and Pakistan are important countries for conducting CM pilot projects, with several potential sites for future CO2 sequestration for a number of reasons: natural resources are abundant, accessibility to Central Asian republics in terms of cost reduction for importing engineering equipment and concentrated CO2 due to the development of Duqum and Gwadar Ports. We recommend that the IPCC step up its efforts to mitigate climate change by undertaking regional collaborations in conducting the CM projects in Oman and Pakistan to achieve the Paris pledges sooner rather than later.
References
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