Quakes vs global warming: Seismic activity found to reduce greenhouse gases, combat acidification in oceans

Chinese team believe movement of earth’s tectonic plates can offset some of the impact of climate change, but say more research required to test hypothesis.

Stephen Chenin Beijing
Another deadly earthquake hit Ya’an city in Sichuan province in April 2013, destroying homes, roads and lives and reviving the debate about reservoir-induced seismicity. But scientists now say there may be a silver lining to these ominous natural disasters. Photo: AFP

Rather than just being something to fear, earthquakes may be a secret ally in man’s fight against global warming, according to an international study led by Chinese scientists.

Quakes can release chemicals like silicates that not just trap greenhouse gas but also help prevent ecological disasters induced by global warming such as ocean acidification, according to their paper published in the journal Geology, run by the Geological Society of America.

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