Biochar in the News

Posted on November 6th, 2008 in News by ajmorris

There were lots of news stories referencing biochar while I was off-line last month, so I’m going back and looking over some of those. I’ll share a brief synopsis with you here:

Carbonscape, a New Zealand firm, is using microwave ovens to produce biochar. They are still investigating methods to recover the gasses and oils that are by-products of the process, and plan to burn the gas to produce electricity to run the microwave oven. It will be interesting to learn how energy efficient that is.

Buried in the topsoil, the charcoal can improve soil fertility, cut soil emissions of greenhouse gases such as methane and nitrous oxide, reduce nitrate and phosphate leaching, increase nitrogen fixation and help soil organisms to extract more carbon from the atmosphere, Mr Gerritsen said.

The Agricultural Research Service (part of the US Department of Agriculture) is investigating ways to produce biochar (which they call ‘green coal’ — the first time I’ve seen that term for it), though the main focus of the referenced article is wet gasification, a method to convert wet manure slurry into energy-rich gases.

An article exploring the impact of the global recession on environmental legislation in Australia recommends, among other options:

Construction in wide areas of rural Australia of a biochar industry based on plantations of trees such as mallee and brigalow. This would create a large number of rural jobs, raise the productivity of farmland, generate appreciable quantities of electricity and allow carbon corresponding to a large proportion of Australia’s emissions to be sequestered.

An article on Rabble News by Myles Estey looks at the promise and potential of biochar, and states:

This, of course, is hugely important news for anyone even remotely concerned with our planet’s health. The fact that biochar can conceivably remove CO2 from the atmosphere and make an end product that has its own set of benefits is certainly compelling, to say the least, and more than worthy of the research Lehmann, Fransham and their peers advocate.

Back Again

Posted on October 29th, 2008 in News by ajmorris

Sorry for not posting so long, but I was off-line for over three weeks after our latest move. The good news is that TelMex finally installed our phone today. The better news is I now have a large garden and plenty of room for biochar experiments. I have a big pile of compost working, and am trying to track down the local herrerío to make me a biochar stove from a 55 gallon drum, similar to those illustrated on the Twin Oaks Forge site.

My original thought was to use the stove to make charcoal from coconut shells after the copra had been extracted, and perhaps use coir for the biochar source material. Haven’t found anyone to help me procure those yet, but did find a mill that specializes in coconut wood — and they just burn their sawdust! I can get that for just the cost of transport, so will probably be using it for the biochar. Still want to make charcoal too, and plan to use that to heat the stove for producing biochar. That way I will know if (as I’ve heard) about 1/3 load of charcoal is needed to produce an full load of biochar/charcoal.

Still catching up on lots of things after the move, so please excuse the lack of details here, but I’ll start posting pictures and more information soon.

The Pending Food Crisis

Posted on September 22nd, 2008 in News by ajmorris

Today’s news includes a report called Long-term Global Food Crisis Looms: Experts Urge Immediate Action, which implies that this year’s surge in grain prices is just the tip of the iceberg. They suggest we need a ‘Second Green Revolution’ to meet the needs of a growing global population:

Unlike the first Green Revolution, in which productivity growth was achieved with the introduction of modern varieties in tandem with assured irrigation and inputs (such as fertilizer), and guaranteed prices, the second Green Revolution needs to achieve the same goal in the face of several 21st-century challenges. These challenges include water and land scarcity, environmental degradation, skyrocketing input prices, and globalized marketplaces, all within the context of global climate change.

The article does not mention biochar, but isn’t it the ONLY potential solution that addresses all of the ‘challenges’ cited? Biochar helps hold moisture in the soil, reducing the amount of irrigation needed. It can be used to reclaim marginal or depleted soils, making more agricultural land available, while increasing crop yields so that there is less need for expanding acreage.

Biochar addresses two important sources of environmental degradation, by sequestering carbon-dioxide and by reducing water pollution. It helps reduce the leeching of nitrogen into groundwater, while reducing the need for fertilizers that are the source of that excess nitrogen.

The ’skyrocketing input prices’ are in a large part due to the use of petrochemical derived fertilizer. With biochar that usage can be reduced, and gradually eliminated by replacing the chemical fertilizers with organic ones. One of the factors holding back the adoption of organic means of fertilization are the high labor costs — but the increasing chemical fertilizer costs combined with the reduced need for frequent application on biochar enhanced soils, will help spark the conversion to sustainable organic methods of fertilization.

Competing in the global marketplace will require greater adaptability from farmers. Healthy, organically enriched and biochar enhanced soils give them more options for crop selection. The increased fertility of the soil will also help them adapt to the changing climate, while widespread use of biochar will reduce the intensity of those climatic changes.

Unbelievably Ignorant Attack on Biochar

Posted on September 9th, 2008 in News by ajmorris

There was an extreme and inane attack on biochar published today on an English site called eGov Monitor that totally amazed me with the vehemence of its misinformation. The title gives a clue where it’s going: International Biochar Conference Uses False Claims to Promote Dangerous Technology in the name of Climate Change Mitigation. Dangerous Technology? Do they have any science to support that? No, of course not. Their most damning claim is that:

The IBI board members are well aware that science does not back their claims.  We were advised by the chair of the board, Professor Lehmann, that there are no long-term experiments to suggest that biochar actually sequesters any carbon in the ground or that it makes soil more fertile.

Well of course not — there have been no long-term studies, because biochar has only recently been brought to the attention of modern civilization. We can’t bring back the Amazon Indians who used biochar thousands of years ago — they’re dead — sorry! I can see why this might cause some to be cautious — but that is no excuse for a pre-supposition that this is ‘dangerous technology’ or any of the other perjorative descriptions in this article, which have no foundation in scientific evidence, but smack of the ‘more people die in hospitals, so hospitals are bad’ sort of reasoning.

The diatribe begins with such claims as:

They claim this is a “carbon negative” process, and that the charcoal improves soil fertility and carbon sequestration. Unfortunately, their claims are unfounded …

Well, as Lehmann has been the first to admit, we have not experimentally proven that carbon always remains in the soil for centuries — in fact the U. of Uppsala study suggests that in boreal forest conditions most of the carbon may return to the atmosphere. Well, most of the planet is not boreal forest, and even if the carbon-sequestration estimates are over-optimistic, the demonstrated benefits to soil fertility (short term) and reduced water pollution are unrefuted. Meanwhile, there is zero evidence from hundreds of studies, that biochar is in any way detrimental to the soil. So how is it ‘dangerous’?

The heights of ignorance are revealed when quoting an organization called ‘Pacific Indigenous Peoples Environmental Coalition and Global Forest Coalition’, which is credited with the non-sensical:

Biochar proponents are speaking about enormous amounts of biomass, which will require hundreds of millions of hectares of land being converted worldwide, as well as removing large amounts of agricultural residues and forest produce which are essential for maintaining healthy soils and biodiversity. In the name of ‘climate change’ mitigation they want to greatly speed up agrofuel expansion, which is already a leading driver of deforestation, other ecosystem destruction and forced removal of indigenous peoples.  This will accelerate global warming. To suggest that any massive new demand for biomass plantations will help stem climate change is a very dangerous false solution.

What land needs be converted to what? Biochar recommendations usually involve normally wasted biomass, such as rice hulls or corn-stover. The biomass is rarely from ‘forest produce’ — only the conversion of slash-and-burn to slash-and-char meets that criteria, and saying that will cause deforestation is beyond belief. That climate change is in quotes suggests that the author doubts the existence of global warming, which suggests he/she is a creationist in God’s hands, and out the purview of us Earth dwellers. Equating biochar with the poorly defined ‘agrofuel’ is sheer nonsense — biofuels are mostly distillation based today, requiring valuable high-sugar crops — while biochar producing fules are hydrogen based, and would use crop residue and organic wastes.

The complaint further on in the article that some companies are trying to patent biochar is certainly of concern — but that has nothing to do with the potential benefits of the technology. Biofuel production is one way to produce biochar, but it can also be produced in highly efficient small-scale retorts that burn the expelled gasses, rather than capturing them for fuel production. If greedy capitalists prevent biochar from being freely adopted as a means of fuel production, that does not prevent agriculturists from using it to improve their crop production, and to reclaim marginal lands, while incidentally reducing water pollution and lowering fertilization costs.

There is no evidence that biochar has any negative effect on soil — beyond the possibilty that it increases weed production (well duh, nobody told it the difference between a weed and a crop plant?) Weeds are one potential source of material for biochar production, so that is far from a fatal flaw.

If biochar turns out to have less than the hoped-for effect in regard to carbon sequestration that only means it is needed more than ever, to help farmers cope with the changing environment — to turn marginal soils into productive fields, to reduce the need for irrigation and fertilizers, to increase crop production under ever-more-difficult environmental conditions. To prevent starvation.

Dr. Rachel Smolker from Global Justice Ecology Project warns that this is yet another scheme for profiteering off of the crisis of climate change.

Oh, so climate change is real? Well so is biochar. As an archaeologist, I know it can last millennia in the soil, though I have no way to measure the percentage of original charcoal that survives that long. Dr. Smolker needs to get her head on straight, and stop worrying about someone making a profit — better for all if biochar can be profitable as well as beneficial, that is what will drive its adoptation.

Soil — Stop Treating it Like Dirt

Posted on August 26th, 2008 in Web Info by ajmorris

There is an article in the latest online issue of National Geographic — in fact it is dated next month (September ‘08) — titled Our Good Earth. The last third of the article is about Terra Preta and Biochar, but the earlier parts are also interesting observations on the practical considerations farmers have to evaluate when treating their soil. Like the compaction caused by large farm equipment. And elsewhere human-induced erosion and desertification. By 2030 there will be over eight billion people on this earth, and we will need 30% more grain than we currently grow, which will be difficult if we continue to lose soil at the current rates.

But the article isn’t all doom and gloom.  The author looks at China, where terracing has created tremendous erosion problems — but he finds a place where they are creating solutions, returning the steepest slopes to natural grasses and trees, using moderate slopes for orchards rather than field crops, and growing their fields of millet and sorghum and corn on the lower, nearly level soils less prone to erosion.

Next the author turns to Africa, where he describes the success stories of the Sahel region, where here and there a drop of hope springs forth in an otherwise barren land. He describes huge and expensive projects sponsored by foreign governments, and simple local projects where farmers use traditional methods to restore soil fertility. Like cordons pierreux. In that process, long lines of fist-sized rocks are lined up on the hard crusted soil. As rains wash over the gentle slopes, the rocks hold it long enough to let some percolate into the ground, and to allow silt to settle out of the roiling waters. Plants grow in the silt, which in turn slow the water more, so that in time trees and shrubs grow.

Another traditional method involves digging holes in the field, and filling them with manure. Termites eat the manure and convert it into compost (termicompost?) while burrowing channels in the soil, loosening the texture. Trees planted in these holes then grow strongly, and their roots help break up more compacted soil, and their leaves add nutrients when they fall.

Finally, the article turns to Terra Preta and the promise of biochar. My title for this post is stolen directly from the last line in the article, a quote from geologist David Montgomery, from the University of Washington. We really do need to pay better attention to our soils, and give them the care they deserve. Who else is going to feed us?

Biochar at Iowa State University

Posted on August 18th, 2008 in News by ajmorris

If you are going to be in Iowa next week, the Iowa State University (ISU) is going to have field-tours of their biofuel crops and biochar enriched fields. The ISU Ag Engineering and Agronomy Research Farm is near Ames, and the tours are open to the public for a $5 fee. Tours will be August 25th and August 29th, just before and just after the nearby Farm Progress Show in Boone. The tours will also feature a talk about ISU’s New Century Farm, the first integrated, sustainable biofuel feedstock production farm and processing facility in the U.S.

I’m looking forward to reading reports on this project, especially — of course — the biochar part. From what I’ve read in other contexts, this is not likely to be a case where dramatic visual differences can be seen in the biochar treated soil, versus untreated soil. Biochar seems to have the greatest benefit where the original soil is the poorest. With already rich soil, the benefits are more long-term. Certainly the carbon sequestration is important in any context. With rich soils (such as I assume they still have in Iowa) it is the reduced run-off of nutrients into the groundwater, better moisture retention during low-precipitation periods, and less frequent need for additional fertilizer, that are the important factors. All of those factors can be measured; one hopes they are doing so at ISU.

Support Biochar Website

Posted on August 17th, 2008 in Web Info by ajmorris

I have just put up a new website called Support Biochar. This new site is a directory of websites that support the idea of spreading the news about biochar.

For now it has just three pages. The home page lists member sites (like this blog) in order by the amount of traffic they get. Those sites are divided into three categories, each of which gets a column on the page: sites that are about biochar, sites that contain some biochar information but are primarily on another topic, and sites that have no biochar content, but support the effort. Member sites put a little button on their sites like seen on this page, saying simply ‘Support Biochar’. The buttons come in three colors, black lettering on a white background, white lettering on a black background, and white lettering on a dark green background. The other two pages are one for joining the site, and one labeled ‘education’ that lists worthwhile sites for people interested in learning more about biochar.

If you have a website, be sure to join us and show your support for biochar education. Being listed on the site will help bring you more visitors, as they explore various sites listed. Putting one of the buttons on your site will help make the site more popular, increasing the interest in biochar. It’s win-win, just like biochar.

Our Biochar Vidio Clip

Posted on August 16th, 2008 in Experiments by ajmorris

Our Biochar Clip
(Just for fun):



When Bokashi Goes Bad

Posted on August 15th, 2008 in Experiments by ajmorris

I’ve added a new page under the ‘Experiments’ section. Those page links used to be in the right column, but since I’ve changed the layout of this blog a bit they are now in the top row, beneath the title. Just click on the ‘Experiments’ tag and you will see the Bokashi experiment listed. It was, sad to say, a failure.

Here in Mexico we have been unable to find the EM (Effective Microorganisms) upon which the Bokashi method rests, so we decided to try to make our own. Apparently, the wild yeast I caught (using basic Sourdough techniques) must have been accompanied by acetic acid bacteria, since our bacteria impregnated wheat bran smelled like vinegar. We tried using it anyhow.

After ten days of adding table scraps sprinkled with the Bokashi mix, our bucket was 3/4 full and smelled pretty bad. I don’t think it was as bad as it would have been had we not added any bacteria, but still it was not right. Every time Isabel opened the bucket to add new material the whole kitchen would smell. Not good.

So we have declared that experiment a failure, and will continue to look for EM to make its appearance here in Mexico. We did find one place on-line that claimed to sell it here, but our emails went unanswered. We will be moving to Colima in another month, and have lots of composting projects planned (I want to compare composting with and without biochar), but for now Bokashi will not be one of them. Someone down there does sell worms for vermiculture, so we will also be trying vermicomposting.

Site Review: Terra Preta at Cornell

Posted on August 9th, 2008 in Site Review by ajmorris

Note: This is the first in a series of reviews of websites related to biochar. All of the site review posts will be listed under the ‘Site Review’ category, providing a simple way for readers to locate and evaluate the information about biochar that is available online. If you would like to recommend a site for review, simply join this site and post a comment to any existing site review blog post.

Cornell University has two large sections of their website devoted to biochar topics, Terra Preta and Biochar (Agrichar), both run by Johannes Lehmann, one of the foremost biochar researchers. This review is for the Terra Preta section, we will cover the biochar (agrichar) section in a future post.

The title for this part of the website is Terra Preta de Indio. In his introduction on the home page, Dr Lehmann briefly describes the origin and character of the Terra Preta soils of the Amazon, and describes the implications for carbon sequestration to fight global warming, and soil fertility to reduce depletion of the rain-forest. While this introduction provides a succinct overview, it is written for other scientists and researchers, not the lay public, with sentences like:

In addition to their high soil organic matter contents as mentioned above, Amazonian Dark Earths are characterized by high P contents reaching 200-400 mg P/kg, and higher cation exchange capacity, pH and base saturation than surrounding soils (Sombroek, 1966; Smith, 1980; Kern and Kämpf, 1989; Sombroek et al., 1993; Glaser et al., 2000; Lehmann et al., 2003; Liang et al., 2006).

What he means to say is that the Terra Preta soils retain nutrients better, with more phosphorus and less acidity than surrounding soils, and they have chemical properties indicative of high-fertility.

There are two navigation bars on the site, one across the top with five links, and one in the left column with six buttons — other than the home page, these are not redundant, even though some seem to address similar subject areas. So ‘Research’ leads to a different page than ‘Projects’ and ‘Publications’ is different from ‘References’. The buttons on the left are repeated in the biochar (agrichar) section of the site, and point to the same pages in both.

Some pages do not seem to have been updated since 2005, but the ‘Publications’ page is kept current. That is the most important page on the site, with nearly 100 links to published reports. It is the most comprehensive guide to the scientific literature behind biochar research that I have seen.

The research section is a bit disappointing in that it lists 13 projects, but only six have links to reports, and a couple of those reports are very superficial. One just takes you back to the Terra Preta home page while another takes you to the Biochar (Agrichar) section home page. I’ll describe these in more detail in the next post in this series, which will cover the Biochar (Agrichar) section of the site.

Overall, this site is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand in-depth the background of scientific research on biochar. Despite the name, this site does not provide much information about the cultural origin of the Terra Preta soils, but it is full of information on the soil chemistry.

Next Page »