There are 3 or 4 laws of thermodynamics, and I can't figure out which one you might possibly be referring to.
I agree that current carbon capture tech is very inadequate, because very little effort has been put into it. How many orders of magnitude better it can get, we don't know until we try, but I don't see any fundamental reason it can't get good enough.
Once you have a solar powered capture machine park pumping CO₂ underground, it can keep working indefinitely at little cost.
> I wonder what were the other important CO₂ producing activities you intend to do less of.
All of them. This is well under way. I don't know how many decades it will take. But that's a separate problem.
The crucial thing to understand is that even if/when all CO₂ production has ended, the produced CO₂ won't disappear by itself for thousands of years!!
So you really need to actively remove it to get back to natural levels. Which is why I think carbon capture tech must be developed.
If you think about it, 2nd law* is the most relevant one because, after all, CO2, being so stable, is one of homo sapiens "favourite" waste materials (partition function yada-yada)
How did plants evolve to use it as nutrients. Solar power. since humans don't need to make fuel from air these days, maybe all of that solar power should go into compute?
.. I'm not saying any laws are broken, just that there are much better (=more efficient, more promising) ways to reduce global warming, like
I agree that current carbon capture tech is very inadequate, because very little effort has been put into it. How many orders of magnitude better it can get, we don't know until we try, but I don't see any fundamental reason it can't get good enough.
Once you have a solar powered capture machine park pumping CO₂ underground, it can keep working indefinitely at little cost.
> I wonder what were the other important CO₂ producing activities you intend to do less of.
All of them. This is well under way. I don't know how many decades it will take. But that's a separate problem.
The crucial thing to understand is that even if/when all CO₂ production has ended, the produced CO₂ won't disappear by itself for thousands of years!!
So you really need to actively remove it to get back to natural levels. Which is why I think carbon capture tech must be developed.