Thanks Elan!!! Thanks Jon!!!

I remember excellent artitcles being posted on Bio-char on this list early last 
year that seemed to have been all but forgotten in the worsening gloom.??

It's great to be reminded again. Besides anything which can give Jon and Tim 
Flannery new?hope is definitely cause for cheer. (now someone needs to tell 
Ross Gelbspan.) It's nice to know that in spite of imminent tipping points we 
may still indeed have at least a fighting chance of avoiding the worst 
consequences?of climate change.?

Jeanne?






-----Original Message-----
From: Jon Bosak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Sustainable Tompkins County listserv 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Sun, 13 Jan 2008 10:48 am
Subject: Re: [SustainableTompkins] Inspiring article on Biochar, a high 
leverage solution



Thanks to Elan for forwarding the "Birth of a New Wedge" article.
Figuring out the carbon accounting is the next step in the growing
terra preta movement we first noticed last year.  This is indeed
an inspiring development.

Biochar is one of two unalloyed pieces of good news to come out of
2007, the other being the finding that organic farms can be as
productive per acre as conventional farms (albeit much more
labor-intensive).  This means that in theory we can decouple food
production from synthetic fertilizers -- a lucky thing for us,
since such fertilizers are created from natural gas, the North
American production of which has been declining for several years
now.  The much greater input of hand labor required for organic
farming at this level of intensity suggests that most of us will
eventually have to spend at least part of each day involved in
individual or team-oriented food production -- a small price to
pay when you consider the alternatives. Besides, it's good for ya.

Biochar is almost magic, and to my mind the most believable
technical fix so far proposed for greenhouse gas reduction.  It's
a biomass energy production scheme with a carbon *negative*
byproduct that also appears to be the world's best long-term soil
amendment.  So the more energy you extract this way, the more
carbon you sequester from the atmosphere and the more productive
(over a number of years) you make the soil.... which makes the
biomass grow better.  This circle almost seems to contradict the
laws of physics, but really all that's going on is an efficient
and intelligently directed use of the sunlight falling on the
growing area.

Here's a technofix vision for you: a farm tractor run off gases
generated by a wood-chip or grass-pellet pyrolizer (which requires
minimal modification to the engine itself), the carbon-rich
biochar from the pyrolizer fed out directly onto the land as a
long-term soil amendment....

A member of last year's peak oil discussion group showed how
easily he converted his mom's pickup to run on a wood-chip
pyrolizer.  It's not rocket science; anyone with a welding kit
could do this.  During WW2, conventionally powered vehicles all
over the world were retrofitted with locally made pyrolizing gas
generators.  It shouldn't take long to engineer pyrolizers that
eject the leftovers at just the right point now that we know what
we're looking for.  This would never produce enough gas to run our
current transportation system, but it could certainly produce
enough to keep some tractors running.

We haven't gotten much really good news on the energy descent
front in recent years, but the prospect of a believable carbon
sequestration scheme that also provides enough to eat and some
farm machinery to help out finds me much cheerier going into 2008
than I was going into 2007.  Now if we can only teach our leaders
the concept of long-term planning....

Jon

Elan Shapiro wrote:
 >      Birth of a New Wedge
 >      By Kelpie Wilson
 >      t r u t h o u t | Report
 >
 >      Thursday 03 May 2007
 > http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/050307R.shtml
 >   >>>Also see other articles on Biochar , or Agrichar, in this
 > listserve last May, when this article came out
 >
 > ...  Agrichar is the term not for the biomass fuel, but for what is
 > left over after the energy is removed: a charcoal-based soil
 > amendment. In simple terms, the agrichar process takes dry biomass of
 > any kind and bakes it in a kiln to produce charcoal. The process is
 > called pyrolysis. Various gases and bio-oils are driven off the
 > material and collected to use in heat or power generation. The
 > charcoal is buried in the ground, sequestering the carbon that the
 > growing plants had pulled out of the atmosphere. The end result is
 > increased soil fertility and an energy source with negative carbon
 > emissions.
 >
 >

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