Thursday, May 1, 2008

Charred Earth Examined as Carbon-Storing Option

Jessica Marshall, Discovery News

May 1, 2008 -- If only we could put all that climate-damaging carbon somewhere other than in the atmosphere. One idea is to make it into dirt.

According to new analysis, this approach could be a way to make energy and store carbon at the same time.


Plants sequester carbon in their tissues through photosynthesis, but when they die, microorganisms decompose them,
releasing carbon dioxide, so the carbon removal is not permanent.

However, when plants burn in forest or brush fires, part of the carbon ends up as charcoal, or biochar, which is resistant to microbial attack and can stay in the soil for hundreds or thousands of years.

Biochar could be a useful long-term carbon storage option, especially because it can improve the fertility of the soil and enhance crop yields, according to Johannes Lehmann of Cornell University in Ithaca, NY. Lehmann proposes that plant residue or crops grown for bioenergy could deliberately be turned into biochar as a way to store carbon, while making energy in the process.

Biochar is made when it is pyrolyzed: heated with little to no oxygen. It is also possible to burn the resulting biochar for energy, which obviously produces more energy out of a given parcel of plants than putting the biochar back into soil, but it doesn't store any carbon.

Lehmann and colleague John Gaunt calculate that storing biochar produces 30 percent less energy, but avoids two to five times more CO2 emissions than burning biochar for energy.

Read More From Marshall HERE

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