[AG-EQ] From the Mother Earth Network

Tracy Carcione carcione at access.net
Fri Sep 6 13:13:49 UTC 2019


Thanks Jewel.
I heard somewhere recently that parts of the Amazon were more like a garden
than a forest, because the people living there had worked to enrich the soil
over many years, but I didn't know exactly how they'd done it.  Now I have a
better understanding.
Tracy


-----Original Message-----
From: AG-EQ [mailto:ag-eq-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Jewel via AG-EQ
Sent: Friday, September 06, 2019 1:13 AM
To: Agricultural and Equestrean Division List; nzbg
Cc: Jewel; blindlikeme at yahoogroups.com
Subject: [AG-EQ] From the Mother Earth Network

Laboriously taken and editted by "Yours truly"
Biochar might be the answer to climate change!  Though you may not have
heard of it by that name, 
it's a good bet you'd recognize it if you saw it.
Those who are familiar with barbecues know it well as it is just charcoal.
It's created when organic 
matter like wood chips, rice/corn stalks or even manure is heated up in the
absence of oxygen. Think 
of a sealed metal drum full of wood chips over a fire. It's simple, can be
produced anywhere and 
could just end up saving the world.
For something as simple as charcoal, biochar, in the right applications,
does three  amazing things: 
It takes carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and locks it into a solid
form;  improves the health 
of the soil it's plowed into, and creates clean energy, according to the
International Biochar 
Initiative.

When organic matter is turned into biochar, the CO2 contained within the
plant is converted into 
solid carbon. and when ploughed back into soil, it is sequestered for a long
time.
Biochar fields have been found in South America dating back thousands of
years and still full of 
their carbon solids. Soils augmented with biochar retain nutrients better as
the tiny, sponge-like 
structure of the carbon solids sucks up and holds the fertilizer, reducing
the amount needed. The 
same structure holds water better and has been shown to decrease the
emissions of nitrous oxide and 
methane.
When "slash-and-burn" farmers in the rainforests of South America reject the
practice   and adopt 
that of "biochar",  they're able to stay and farm the same plot of land year
after year instead of 
having to move on every couple of seasons when the soil becomes depleted.
Their destructive path through the rainforest is , well!  not * halted yet:
we still have some way 
to go before that happy day dawns, , but is, greatly, reduced:  thus saving
thousands of acres of 
precious forest: ergo, the habitats of the animals and plants with whom they
* share it, not * have 
sole ownership to!

An easy sell

When organic matter is heated up in the absence of oxygen, it releases hot
gases that can be 
captured and burned in power generators, or also refined into bio-oil and
synthetic gas, both which 
can be further refined into effective gasoline and diesel substitutes. If
the gases are burned right 
away, the process of creating biochar - called pyrolysis - is
energy-positive, returning six to nine 
times as much energy as necessary to run and maintain it.

Right now we're far from squeezing out all the benefits biochar offers.
Sustenance-based 
slash-and-burn farmers still must slash , and we need to build the
infrastructure for taking in 
agricultural waste from farms and then distributing the resulting biochar
back to their fields. One 
of the great things about biochar is how easy it is to make. Poor farmers
can make it using simple, 
handmade clay kilns, while rich farmers can build elaborate biochar
processing plants that also 
generate electricity, bio-oil and synthetic gas.

Biochar is an easy sell. Everyone involved in the process wins. Poor farmers
get more food for their 
work and are able to settle on one plot of ever-productive soil. Rich
farmers and corporate 
agriculture save a lot of money on fertilizer and also see the same boost in
production. The 
environment benefits because of the reduction in fertilizer runoff and the
removal of CO2 from the 
air. Big business wins because of the profits generated from the production
and distribution of 
biochar. Politicians get to take credit for implementing a pragmatic,
job-creating solution to 
global warming. Workers get jobs. Governments get tax revenue and that is
only the benefits to the 
human race, so when the benefits that the other residents of this planet are
taken into account, 
biochar seems to be a win/win solution. 


_______________________________________________
AG-EQ mailing list
AG-EQ at nfbnet.org
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/ag-eq_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for AG-EQ:
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/ag-eq_nfbnet.org/carcione%40access.net





More information about the AG-EQ mailing list