GuyGadeboisLeRetour wrote:Moindreffor wrote:GuyGadeboisLeRetour wrote:I give a lead. Are you paranoid or what? Molluscs transform Co2 into calcium carbonate (limestone) ...
You just have to see what it has given over millions of years... mountains, massifs, islands, etc ...
that's exactly why your idea, based on a reality is a bad idea, since we no longer have millions of years in front of us
between there is urgency and over millions of years there is like an incongruity
Uh ... have you seen the billions of tons of limestone spread across the globe ??? The mountain ranges, the islands? Look at the weight of an oyster and conclude what you like. I still believe this is a good solution.
Phytoplankton alone captures more than half of the terrestrial CO2!
I think that you have an apriori when you answer us, I did say that your idea was founded, except that the phenomena that you evoke took place as you say it over millions of years and as you add it with billion tons, so how could we compress the equivalent of over millions of years of production in 50 years and on a human scale produce billions of tons of oysters?
In 2010, world shellfish farming produced 14.2 million tons, it would therefore be necessary to multiply world production by 1000 to reach 14.2 billion tons therefore for 7 billion inhabitants, a consumption of one ton per person
otherwise produce, at a loss, that is to say produce and euthanize to deposit the shells at the bottom of the oceans or elsewhere