"Right now there is lots of talk about burying carbon dioxide,  which is ridiculous,"    "Do we take that CO2 and bury it, or do we use  sunlight to turn it back into fuel?" 
 Powered by sunlight, titanium  oxide nanotubes can turn carbon dioxide into methane, which can be harnessed as  an energy source, say scientists at Pennsylvania State  University.
 The nanotubes could dramatically  reduce CO2 emissions into the atmosphere and reduce our need for fossil  fuels.
  .. "Instead we can collect the waste out of the smoke stack, put it  though a converter, and presto, use sunlight to change [CO2] back into  fuel."
 This is solar power by another name, say Grimes  and other scientists. Instead of storing electrons in batteries, Grimes' idea  would store energy chemically. 
 "If you want to use hydrogen as a  energy source in the future, you have to convert all the existing  infrastructure," said Choi. " But we've  been using methane for years, and can utilize all the infrastructure we already  have."
 "It's a clean and sustainable  cycle as long as you have sun and water," said Choi.
 Read full review from Craig Grimes of Penn State, who, along with Oomman Varghese, Maggie Paulose and Thomas LaTempa, co-authored a paper on the nanotubes at Discovery.com
