Minnkota Power Cooperative's ambitious venture to capture and store carbon dioxide off of a coal plant in central North Dakota appeared before state regulators on Tuesday, in a hearing that focused in part on concerns that carbon dioxide could escape from the subterranean vault targeted by the company.
Minnkota Power Cooperative's ambitious venture to capture and store carbon dioxide off of a coal plant in central North Dakota appeared before state regulators on Tuesday, in a hearing that focused in part on concerns that carbon dioxide could escape from the subterranean vault targeted by the company.
Minnkota Power Cooperative's ambitious venture to capture and store carbon dioxide off of a coal plant in central North Dakota appeared before state regulators on Tuesday, in a hearing that focused in part on concerns that carbon dioxide could escape from the subterranean vault targeted by the company.
Minnkota Power Cooperative's ambitious venture to capture and store carbon dioxide off of a coal plant in central North Dakota appeared before state regulators on Tuesday, in a hearing that focused in part on concerns that carbon dioxide could escape from the subterranean vault targeted by the company.