Biochar Can Improve Soil Health While Capturing Carbon

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Millions of tons of organic waste from agriculture and forestry operations are left to rot or get burned each year. Either way, the embedded carbon goes straight into the atmosphere, where it contributes to more global heating. If those same waste products were converted into biochar, they could sequester some of that carbon for years or even decades.

I came across an article about biochar in Grist recently and realized I really didn’t know much about it. So I contacted Jock Gill, who lives in Peacham, Vermont, and is deeply committed to any and all methods of reducing the amount of carbon dioxide humans add to the atmosphere. Jock is the one who got me interested in the Peacham Community Solar project we told our readers about last month.

US Biochar Initiative
Not surprisingly, he is also involved with the biochar movement and immediately put me in touch with Tom Miles, the executive director of the US Biochar Initiative in Portland, Oregon. Its website is an excellent resource forthose who want to know more about biochar.

In an email, Tom Miles told me, “Biochar production today ranges from small scale at a few lb per day to 50 tons — 300 cubic yards — per day. New production is being planned for 70-140 tons per day.

“Uses range from retail gardens to landscaping, turf and trees, community gardens, municipal stormwater, small to medium farms with high value crops, environmental applications and building products. Large scale farms will probably adopt biochar when biochar-based products to solve specific problems are available in large quantities.

“Biochar accounts for 50% of the carbon and 20% of the mass of the biomass you start with. The other 50% of the carbon is available as condensable liquids (vinegars and oils), and non-condensable gases (carbon monoxide, hydrogen). We have limited markets for the liquid products today. In today’s market you need to use renewable energy to justify production, which is a barrier to building industrial scale facilities”

Down The Rabbit Hole
biochar
Image courtesy of Carbonculture

When I first contacted Jock Gill, he warned me that biochar is a very deep rabbit hole, and he was so right. While putting this story together, I had 11 tabs open on my computer. Here’s what I learned.

Biochar is made by heating organic waste in a reduced oxygen environment, which can be as simple as covering a fire with dirt — a process used by Aztek people — or as complex as using an expensive retort. The later becomes largely self-heating, as the syngas created inside can be captured and used to supply fuel for the process. For maximum environmental benefits, the process should be heated using electricity from renewable sources.

Biochar Basics
There is a common misconception that biochar is one thing. It is not. It can be made from a variety of organic waste products and heated from as little as 300º C to as much as 1400º C. The combination of source material and temperature results in a dizzying array of final produts ranging from a fine ash to large chunks.

All organic materials contain carbon. The pyrolysis process turns some of that carbon into a lattice-like structure that is so stable, it can last for years or even decades. The size of the lattice varies depending on the source and the heating process, so it’s important to know what its intended use is before using it.

In general, biochar helps the soil retain water and nutrients. It is also provides a place for microbes to grow. It can help capture pollutants like heavy metals and filter stormwater to keep those pollutants out of rivers and aquifers.

Perhaps the most important benefit of biochar is that it converts about 50% of the carbon in organic waste into a stable compound that stays locked in the soil. Typically, 90% or more of that carbon ends up in the atmosphere as it decomposes or is burned.

That makes biochar a simple and inexpensive way to capture carbon and lock it away for generations or even centuries. That, in turn, hasattracted the interest of corporations who are interested in purchasing carbon credits to offset their own emissions. The demand for credits may provide a revenue stream that will allow the use of biochar to expand beyond its niche status today.