Scientists find the formula for safe fields that remove carbon dioxide

Spreading the dust of stones through agricultural fields can absorb billions of tons of carbon dioxide from the air each year, according to the first detailed global analysis of this technique. The chemistry reactions that come out of stone particles prove to be very good, and some scientists say this effort can [...]
The chemistry reactions coming out of stone particles turn out to be very good, and some scientists say this effort could be the best short-term way to remove CO2s from the atmosphere.
Researchers understand that stopping burning fuels that release carbon dioxide is the best action needed to challenge climate emergency. But climate scientists also agree that massive amounts of carbon dioxide had to be removed from the air to achieve the goals of the Paris agreement that sought to reduce global temperature, writes The Guardian, the Periscope.
Stone dust had some vanillas, according to them. First, many farmers are already throwing limestone at crops to reduce acidification, and adding dust to other stones improves the softness and crops in general.
Basalt is the best stone for preventing carbon dioxide, and many mines already produce it as byproducts.
Researchers also found that the world's largest air pollutors, China, the United States and India, had the largest potential for this stone powder. /Periscope












