Monday, March 30, 2009

Montbiots’ rejection of biochar

At first, I was somewhat confused by the critical texts against the use of biochar as a carbon dioxide reduction agent issued by the famous environmentalist George Monbiot.

Apart from some obvious exaggerations (‘turning the planet into charcoal’, 'primary source of world heating fuel’) and misunderstandings, he talks about the destructions of the forests, enormous monoculture plantations, and so on, that would be the effects of large scale use of charcoal, or biochar, as the term is used to differ it from fossil coal.

He also talks repugnantly and ironically against the obviously beneficial by-products of producing char; the increased plant production from the enhanced microbial activity achieved by mixing char into the soil, and the use of heat and tars emitted as by-products from the charring procedure (pyrolysis). He claims that biochar proponents say that these by-products could replace the use of fossil fuels throughout the world.

At first, I just thought that Monbiot and others with him, just reacted with some sort of conditioned reflex to protest against anything that looks as a behavioural turning or the introduction of a method that could be used generally, but is different from what we do today. However, Monbiots part of it surprised me, since he had earlier accepted and approved other issues that are far more radical.

But then, I realised what was the fundamental mistake, not only by Monbiot, but also by some of the biochar proponents.

Either, they think about removing all the excess carbon from the atmosphere.

Immediately, in one stroke.

That is at least 35 ppm worth, or 2.12 x 35 Gt carbon (= 75 Gt), or almost three times the current net annual plants production of coarse biomass. It would wipe out the plant cover.

Or, they think about removing all the current emission (8 Gt C) of carbon dioxide, plus hopefully, an extra Gt annually, to successively decrease the carbon dioxide content in the air and move out of the danger zone. That would require about two third of the annual production, leading to diversity loss and ruthless exploitation.

In that respect, Monbiot is perfectly right.

But, let us, just for a second, imagine that a responsible way to solve the problem of climatic carbon dioxide excess could be thread. Then, I imagine that a maximum of 15% -20% of the net annual biomass production could be appropriated for charring. That is about the same size as the global forestry sector, which certainly has had severe adverse effects on the face of Earth. But, in contrast to the forestry industry, biomass for carbonisation can be of any kind, from rice husks and other harvest surplus to twigs and branches, to plants purposely grown for carbon dioxide absorption.

Just look at your local environment with ‘the eyes of a sequester’! Plant production for food, to increase local diversity, or to absorb nutrient leakage does not exclude charring of the residues or decaying plants. A ‘black revolution’ does not necessarily exclude an ethically correct management.

Charring just 15% of the global net production does not considerably change the global atmospheric carbon dioxide content. But most of us agree that it is impossible to char more, because it will undermine our life support system, thus only let us jump from the frying-pan into the fire.

But here, the normally futile way of answering the climate change problem starts to make sense; If we, simultaneously with increasing charring, could considerably reduce our carbon dioxide emissions, say, with 90%, then, the emissions would be smaller than the possible sequestration! With the figures above, the sequestration exceeds the emissions with about 1-2 Gt per year.

This reduction in the use of fossil fuels will also reduce our capacity to make food from oil (We call this activity agriculture.), but that is another story…

Trying to obtain these combined goals means that we would have started a route towards a real decrease of the global carbon dioxide content together with a possible increase in biodiversity and soil fertility.

In the attached graph, a scenario assuming an increasing popularity of charring combined with an emission reduction to 90 % over a period of 20 years is assumed. Of course it is severely unrealistic, but it points out that there is a least a theoretical possibility to release ourselves out of the current problems. It also shows that such a Herculean effort also may stop the increase of the atmospheric carbon dioxide content within two decades.



[Be like the blackbird: It sees the morning long before the sun has risen]

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Pure optimistic fantasy


Assume, for a moment, that all people of the world made a decision to stop global warming by reducing emissions at the same time as removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

Here, I will not deal with the necessary emission reduction of 90%, but look at the sequestration side: How could people be encouraged to create charcoal and bury it in soil in amounts large enough to make a difference?

It is not hard to persuade growers and farmers to put charcoal in the soil, sine the benign effects are so many and visible that any grower will start, once they see the effects, at home or by someone else. The problem is that he farmers and growers are so few, and the amounts so large. We have to remove 70 gigatonnes (70 000 000 000 000 kg) of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere only to come to a reasonably safe level (350 ppm).

Today, the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is not diminishing at all. On the contrary, it is increasing with about 8 gigatonnes annually. That represents an increase in carbon dioxide level with more than 3 ppm. The numbers speaks for themselves. I will not discuss how the emission reduction might be done.

So, how to make people interested in carbon dioxide burying? Say, that it is possible to annually char about 12-15% of the global net production of biomass, about the same size as the global forest industry. That would make it possible to annually remove about 2 gigatonnes from the carbon cycle, so it not ends up in the atmosphere again.

Some nations (Sweden, Finland, Norway, the Netherlands, UK and British Columbia in Canada) have started to tax the emissions of carbon dioxide, assuming people by that would reduce their emissions. The Swedish tax is 1 SEK, about $ 0.16, per kilo carbon dioxide .We have an entrance here.

In my fantasy, I will decree a carbon dioxide tax for all emissions, all over the world. No exceptions for heavy polluters, as we have here in Sweden . Say, that the global tax would be half of the one in Sweden (0.5 SEK, or $0.08, £0.04, €0.05 per kilo carbon dioxide emitted)

I can imagine the shriek echoing all over the world after almighty me have imposed that tax. I
also realise that it would not decease the emissions very much, just lead to more money in circulation.

But all these money (2.4 thousand billion dollars, counted as the current emissions) could also be seen as an asset if they are set to the right action.

While fantasizing, we also introduce the notion of a fair carbon dioxide tax. As all people (in this perfect world, ruled by me) have to pay for carbon dioxide emissions, they should also get a chance to earn from drawing carbon dioxide back.

So, I make another decree: Those who bury carbon in the soil shall be paid the same amount as the emission-makers have to pay for their emissions. (Here comes some chemistry in: As carbon dioxide has the molecular weight of 44, but carbon only has the weight of 12, the weight of carbon that is put into the soil must be multiplied with 44/12=3.7 for the sequesterer to get the right payment). Firstly, that would lead to an interesting effect: The busy sequesterer, working in the field, would be quite interested in reducing his “carbon dioxide footprint”, since hat would reduce his net income. He, also, has to pay emission tax if he emits carbon dioxide .

But, most interesting is that everybody, all over the world (perhaps not the guys living on Greenland) would have the opportunity to get a real income from carbon sequestering. Given the above tax rate, the sequestering of two tonnes of carbon per hectare farmland (which is easy, done simply by the crop residues) should get receipts for that corresponding to $ 600. As this easily could be done just using crop residues, it is not competing with food production at all. Furthermore, after digging the char into the soil, the production will increase by more than 50% the following years.

Naturally, objections against this scheme can be numerous, including problems of controllability, bribing etc.

In a charring plant of a larger size, also the pyrolysis gasses (60% of the biomass) can be industrially utilized for numerous uses, or for energy.

But that is another story.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Right observation, wrong conclusion

Some time ago, I got an enthusiastic e-mail from a friend.

He told me he have had a compost heap at home
(Really a heap of leaves, not the neat thing you often find in a residential garden. It had been staying there for years, with just a slight decease in volume).
After having repeatedly listening to me talking of the benefits of adding char to compost and soils, he thought that he should give it a try. So he took some leftover barbeque char and put in the compost heap.

That was last autumn. He forgot everything until some weeks ago when he happened to stroll by. The heap had disappeared! Instead of the heap of semi-mouldered leaves, there was a much smaller heap of something rather looking like soil, with lots of earthworms in it. Plus the char.

Then he went to the computer and mailed me: --“ I am a believer …!

-----------------------------------

In last week’s number of Science, (2 May), David Wardle, Marie-Charlotte Nilsson och Olle Zackrisson delivers an article: "Fire-Derived Charcoal Causes Loss of Forest Humus". They have done exactly the same observation, that charcoal increases soil meabolism, using a controlled measurement method during a ten-year long test. They used three types of 1 gram bags containing respectively charcoal, humus and humus + charcoal, letting them stay in the soil for up to ten years.

The investigation revealed that the reduction in weight of the bags containing both charcoal and humus was much larger than the bags containing only charcoal or only humus.
Just like my friend with the compost heap found out.

So long, so well. A fair conclusion would have been that the charcoal increases the soil metabolism. Not mentioned in the report, but the also found increased vegetation around the bag with humus + char.

Sadly, they did not stay with that. They also jumped to a conclusion where they claim that the increased microbial activity break down humus particles at a rate that counteracts the carbon sequestration effect of the carbon.

The latter conclusion, however, is wrong.
Since the humus particles would have been broken down later anyhow, a faster breakdown will not counteract the carbon sequestration made by the incorporation of carbon particles in soil.
Just like the compost heap of my friend; waiting some more years would have changed an un-charred heap into the same composted state as the one with char added.

The decomposition rate of the humus in the soil has nothing to do with the carbon sequestration capacity of the charcoal. This capacity is only influenced by the longevity of the charcoal in soil (which is many thousands of years)

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Critical numbers: Where should Humanity Aim?

James Hansen and his associates are currently working with a manuscript called "Target Atmospheric CO2: Where Should Humanity Aim?", available in the link above.
In it, they conclude that, to be out of the immediate danger of tipping our life support system into a state where it no longer can be considered a life support system to us (the humanity), the carbon dioxide level in the atmosphere should be below 350 ppm.

The carbon dioxide level in the atmosphere is 385 ppm today.

This means that the atmosphere contains about 74 Gt too much carbon. Every year, about 7 Gt more is released. Say, as a thought experiment, that all emissions, 100%, are stopped within 20 years (don't ask me how), leading to a total breakdown of our current society. Even that would mean additional emissions of about 70 Gt more, leading to a CO2 concentration of 418 ppm (if the oceans don't suck up anything more, perhaps 400 ppm if they are friendly enough to do that).
CO2 levels like that would probably lead us far beyond several tipping points.
Even if not, the resulting climate would not feed the population, not to talk about the potential for floodings.

So, if disaster is threating whatever we do, should we give up?

No, since there is one more possibility: If the efforts to decrease emissions are combined with a massive sequestration of carbon, then it is possible to back away from the ominous carbon dioxide levels.
As the incorporation of plant charcoal in the soil obviously has a lot of benign effects (Google: Terra Preta ), increasing crops, reducing nutrient loses and so on, why shouldn't we start immediately?

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

The carbon numbers II

I have several times been asked about the amount of carbon existing in excess in the atmosphere, and the possibilities to remove it within reasonable time. Therefore, I will provide the figures as far as I know them, and the reasoning behind them.
If you can't stand numbers, stop reading here.

The global annual net primary production (NPP) varies, but is estimated to be between 70 and 100 Gt per year, by different sources. This is the annual biomass growth in the plant cover of the Earth. For ease of calculation, let's take 80 Gt as the number. Say that 50% of this is thin roots and leaves, not usable for charring. Remains 40 Gt C that is theoretically available for charring each year.
Assume furthermore that efforts to create charcoal for carbon sequestration results in an annual sequestration of 2 Gt C as charcoal. That would mean an addition of four tonnes of char per hectare globally, certainly a war-like effort. The global forest product production 2004 was abut 9.5 Gt (FAO), with a carbon content that can be estimated to 3.8 Gt C, so we are speaking of a herculean, warlike efforts in charring, about half the size of the global forest industry.
However, char can be made from not only forest products, but also straw and husks from agriculture, as well as forest products that are useless to the industry, which makes it at least theoretically possibie to reach a goal of 2 Gt. That is about 8.5% of the above figure of coarse biomass production.

Jim Hansen and Pushker Kharecha of NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies have pointed out some faults in my calculations in the following paragraph, why I below present it in the revised form :
The carbon dioxide "cloud" is presently about 475 Gt too large (counted as accumulted emissions of C, carbon). Due to buffering from seas and other ecosystems, the atmosphere only contain 220 Gt of carbon The number is the difference between the atmospheric content in pre-industrial time (280 ppm) and that of today (384 ppm). (Of this figure, about 33% is from deforestation). (Figures from Richard A Houghton, Woods Hole Research Center, one of the IPCC guys, and Jim Hansen/Pushker Kharecha of NASA) Imagine that you could take all this away and convert it into charcoal. That amount would add about 955 tonnes of char per hectare agricultural land globally. This wll give the soils a carbon content f about 25%, not very far from the Terra Preta soils. But with the above efforts, 2 Gt p.a., it would take about two hundred years to reach that point.

The global carbon dioxide effluents of today are equivalent of about 7 Gt C. Assume, for a moment, that the people and their leaders around the world will face the imminent danger of a sudden and irreversible climate change and decide to do everything possible to avoid it. They decide to start the above sequestration combined with a sudden braking in carbon emissions, e.g. an 85% reduction in 25 years, leveling out on roughly 1 Gt C per annum, leading to a net sequestration of about 1 Gt C per annum.
Then, given that the reduction is even over time, one could expect that the carbon dioxide cloud could start reversing after about 18 years.

I hope sincerely, that that is not too late.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

The carbon numbers

I have several times been asked about the amount of carbon existing in excess in the atmosphere, and the possibilities to remove it within reasonable time. Therefore, I will provide the figures as far as I know them, and the reasoning behind them.
If you can't stand numbers, stop reading here.

The global annual net primary production (NPP) varies, but is estimated to be between 70 and 100 Gt per year, by different sources. This is the annual biomass growth in the plant cover of the Earth. For ease of calculation, let's take 80 Gt as the number. Say that 50% of this is thin roots and leaves, not usable for charring. Remains 40 Gt C that is theoretically available for charring each year.
Assume furthermore that efforts to create charcoal for carbon sequestration results in an annual sequestration of 2 Gt C as charcoal. The global forest product production 2004 was abut 9.5 Gt (FAO), with a carbon content that can be estimated to 3.8 Gt C, so we are speaking of a herculean, warlike efforts in charring, about half the size of the global forest industry.
However, char can be made from not only forest products, but also straw and husks from agriculture, as well as forest products that are useless to the industry, which gives us a large possibility to reach a goal of 2 Gt. Which is about 8.5% of the above figure of coarse biomass production.

The carbon dioxide "cloud" is presently about 475 Gt too large (counted as C, carbon). The number is the difference between the atmospheric content in pre-industrial time (280 ppm) and that of today. (Of this figure, about 33% is from deforestation). (Figures from Richard A Houghton, Woods Hole Research Center, one of the IPCC guys.)
Imagine that you could take this amount away and convert it into charcoal. That amount would add about 95 kg char per hectare agricultural land globally. 38 bags of barbecue char. Not very much . But with the above efforts, 2 Gt p.a., it would take more than three hundred years to reach that point.

The global carbon dioxide effluents of today are equivalent of about 7 Gt C. Assume, for a moment, that the people and their leaders around the world will face the imminent danger of a sudden and irreversible climate change and decide to do everything possible to avoid it. They decide to start the above sequestration combined with a sudden braking in carbon emissions, e.g. an 85% reduction in 25 years, leveling out on roughly 1 Gt C per annum, leading to a net sequestration of about 1 Gt C per annum.
Then, given that the reduction is even over time, one could expect that the carbon dioxide cloud could start reversing after about 18 years.
I hope sincerely, that that is not too late.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Bali: the lose of the losers

Today, the Bali meeting to combat global warming is still not over, but however the ultimate outcome, one thing is to be said for sure: Because they focus on emission reductions only, they will not offset global warming.
Naturally (sad to say) the statesmen will not be able to agree. Vested interests prevail.
But.
Assume, quite hypothetically of course, that they concur of the utmost severeness of the problem and agree on, and stick to, a 90% decrease of the emissions of carbon dioxide during the nearest 15 years, starting today.
Even such an effort would give the atmosphere an additional amount of 20 Gt carbon dioxide, assuming the annual emissions of today is 7 Gt.
Even this amount might lead to abrupt climate changes. And we must do everything possible to avoid that. (Read Mark Lynas 'Six degrees')

So, even if the politicians stand together and make bold decisions, we all will probably lose.

So what to do? Pray the last prayer, take farewell of our closest, let the musicians play "Nearer, My God, to Thee" ?

No. There is a further possibility. If we combine a radical reduction of emissions with a strenuous effort in carbon sequestration with charcoal, say of 2 Gt annually (see below), then the actual amount of atmospheric carbon dioxide will start to diminish within 7-10 years, and we might get off with nothing more than the fright (and more fertile soils).

Otherwise, we might all loose.