Dig a hole and fill it.
Liquid CO2?
Consider that the states had originally decided that they did not have to respect the personal rights that they expressly "protected" in the Bill of Rights (BoR). The state obligated only the federal government to respect the rights expressly protected by the BoR.
So hypothetically speaking, if this case had been decided before the 14th Amendment (14A) was ratified, that amendment applying all constitutionally enumerated personal protections to the states, then the judge would have had to decide the case against private Ohio land owners because of no constitutional checks against state eminent domain power regardless of checks on federal power imo.
Sadly, even after more than 150 years after 14A ratification, some state lawmakers and attorneys evidently still don't have a grip (institutionally indoctrinated?) on constitutional limits on state and federal government powers.
“3. The Constitution was written to be understood by the voters; its words and phrases were used in their normal and ordinary as distinguished from technical meaning; where the intention is clear, there is no room for construction and no excuse for interpolation or addition.” —United States v. Sprague, 1931.
They are going to deposit the lethal mother lode in solidly GOP southern Illinois, somewhere near Taylorville. It belongs, if anywhere, under Chicago, ideally under the Obama vomitorium. But the more likely hazard is that ANY leaks along the pipeline turn into Lake Nyos events. All done to remedy a non-existent problem.
I’d love to know what kind of damage to the environment will happen with these ridiculous “carbon sequestration” schemes. Pumping process CO2 with trace chemicals of unknown origin into the ground is bound to come back and bite us in the ass.
“collect, convert it to liquid form and transport it under high pressure to an Illinois site, where it would be pumped thousands of feet beneath the surface.”
i wonder how much NEW atmospheric gets released from the energy that it takes to do operate all of the? how about the new atmospheric released to mine, smelt, manufacture and install all of the materials to build all of that infrastructure? I wonder if there is even a net reduction of atmospheric CO2 doing all of the above?