Illinois Engineers Show Impact of Severe Weather on Climate Change Mitigation

Oct 08, 2025

By Jeni Bushman

While rivers are popular magnets for fishing, boating and kayaking, they are also potential powerhouses in the fight against climate change. Rivers and streams carry inorganic carbon from land to oceans in a process called lateral carbon flux. In recent years, environmental engineers have proposed to utilize this movement in a class of carbon sequestration strategies known as “enhanced weathering,” in which atmospheric carbon is redistributed to the ocean through agricultural soil.

Although interest in accelerating the routing of carbon from the atmosphere into landscapes and waterways has fueled a surge of investment in enhanced weathering, researchers from The Grainger College of Engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign wondered if extreme weather conditions fueled by climate change could also, paradoxically, be a bottleneck to these mitigation efforts.

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