Remind me not to put you in charge of safety programs.
1000 PSI tanks are always an explosion hazard. They need regular inspections to check for corrosion or cracking, as do the high pressure lines connected to the tanks.
Even the 300 PSI of cold storage is an explosion hazard. Plus it needs constant temperature and pressure monitoring, because if the temperature rises the pressure will also rise and could explode any components in the system not designed to handle the higher pressures of warmer CO2.
As to being an inert gas, I have to concede that based on the typical definition of inert. But inert does not mean without hazards. You might check that out with the guys in the room with a leaking CO2 line. Wait, you can’t do that because they are dead from CO2 inhalation.
===================================================
Your rant shows that you are not a mechanical engineer and, therefore, lack knowledge about industrial facilities using high pressure systems and the associated safety protocol. And by the way, engineers are by definition safety engineers. Every aspect of my engineering of systems and components had to consider safety.
Now to the design of Energy Dome which is needs to meet all industrial safety regulations with pressure vessel, piping, valves, compressors, heat exchangers and other equipment meeting ASME codes and standards. ASME Pressure Vessel Code Section VIII Div. 1 is for 15 psi to 3000 psi designs, Div. 2 is for 3000 psi to 10,000 psi designs and Div. 3 is for greater than 10,000 psi designs. Following ASME codes and standards will prevent explosions.
In your rant, I think you are mixing up industrial facilities with residential facilities. The Energy Dome with probably operate around 500 psia. We have industrial facilities all over the country that regularly use pressure vessels. piping and equipment with pressures of 100 to 10,000 psi and higher. Think about refineries, chemical plants, power plants, natural gas pipelines, aerospace and some many other industrial facilities and commercial facilities.
Many of these facilities use fluids and gases much more hazardous than CO2. CO2 is not corrosive so corrosion is greatly reduced. Thus CO2 is a much easier gas/fluid to design pressure vessels, piping and associated equipment.
Jaak