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Two Philadelphia natives meet at Salem College in Winston Salem.
Nathan Ross Freeman is Aileen Muhammad's poetry and screenwriting
professor. She believes he is her blood brother by some accidental
occurrence. He says maybe in another life. She begins to write
stories. He shares his and here they are. The threads that weave
the fabric of these stories, the entry into the avenue of the muse
and the poetic conjures are startling and satisfying.
Two Philadelphia natives meet at Salem College in Winston Salem.
Nathan Ross Freeman is Aileen Muhammad's poetry and screenwriting
professor. She believes he is her blood brother by some accidental
occurrence. He says maybe in another life. She begins to write
stories. He shares his and here they are. The threads that weave
the fabric of these stories, the entry into the avenue of the muse
and the poetic conjures are startling and satisfying.
Carbon capture and sequestration (or storage), known as CCS, has
attracted congressional interest as a measure for mitigating global
climate change because large amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2)
emitted from fossil fuel use in the United States are potentially
available to be captured and stored underground and prevented from
reaching the atmosphere. Large, industrial sources of CO2, such as
electricity-generating plants, are likely candidates for CCS
because they are predominantly stationary, single-point sources.
Electricity generation contributes over 40% of U.S. CO2 emissions
from fossil fuels. Currently, U.S. power plants do not capture
large volumes of CO2 for CCS. This book provides an overview of
what CCS is, how it is supposed to work, why it has gained the
interest and support of some members of Congress, and what some of
the challenges are to its implementation and deployment across the
United States.
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