There are plenty of places where salt can be deposited under ground and stay put for millions of years. This is the reason salt mines can exist in regions that have no salt leaking into their ground water from those salt deposits. I don't think there is any practical limit to the amount of salt we could store in this manner.
That line of thinking is very dangerous. There is ALWAYS a limit to what we can store where. The amount of salt byproduct that will result from populating the ME and Saharan Africa like, say, Europe, will result in amazing quantities of salt. Building underground mines to store them all would be prohibitively expensive and after a while impracticle
You need to power those babies, you know...
Great, in a century Barrow will be a tiny village of 5,000,000 instead of 5,000.
Sell it to the poor little countries in the Middle East and Saharan Africa, they can just stick it in thier deserts.
Do you mean safely because it wont harm our sealife or beacuse you wont have to deal with it? If its the latter, I object.

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