Charcoal
disguised as “biochar” sold as another profitable climate tech-fix
According to a growing, vocal and very well-connected group of scientists,
entrepreneurs and lobbyists, the best if not the only way of humanity
surviving climate change and solving the food and energy crisis
is to plough billions of tonnes of charcoal into the soil every
year. They call charcoal used in this way “biochar” and claim that
it will lock up carbon for thousands of years, provide energy through
the same process which produces the charcoal, greatly increase plant
yields and stop deforestation (caused, according to many of them,
mainly by small farmers who slash and burn forests because they
cannot keep their soil fertile). However bizarre and unfounded these
claims may be, they are being taken very seriously in high-level
policy circles.
A keynote speaker at the 2008 conference of the International Biochar
Initiative (IBI), which is the main biochar lobbying forum, was
the Australian Tim Flannery. He chairs the Copenhagen Climate Council
which is organising the World Business Summit on Climate Change
in May, ’09, which will put forward business and pro-business leaders’
‘recommendations’ to UNFCCC. Many IBI members and supporters are
similarly well-connected and able to influence high-level policy
decisions.
The IBI achieved major successes at the Poznan UNFCCC Conference:
Following a UNCCD submission in Poznan, biochar has been included
into the “dialogue for the post 2012 climate regime”. 1 Furthermore,
the government of Micronesia proposed that biochar should play a
vital role in mitigating climate change. Post-2012 CDM credits for
biochar could be formally approved at Copenhagen.
If it is endorsed then a statement made by Flannery about “biochar”
might well prove correct: “With the appropriate …promotion and adoption,
it will change our world forever”, though, there is every reason
to reach the opposite conclusion regarding the second part of his
sentence: “and very much for the better”.2
Fine-grained charcoal is a by-product from biomass pyrolysis, a
form of bioenergy production which yields two types of fuel; bio-oil
and syngas as well as the charcoal. Both can be used for heat and
power and they can also be further refined into second-generation
agrofuels, i.e. into fuel for cars and potentially planes. It thus
fits in perfectly with the push for biorefineries and tree plantations
to fuel cars, but it does not depend on those. Pyrolysis for heat
and power could be rapidly scaled up, provided that ‘market hurdles’
can be overcome. If pyrolysis companies could earn money from turning
the biochar into patented fertilisers (with plantation expansion
guaranteeing high profits from fertilisers), and if, on top of that
they could attract carbon credits, the industry could take off very
quickly. For companies such as Best Energies, Eprida, Dynamotive
and Biomass Energy and Carbon, getting biochar included into carbon
trading could make the difference between possible bankruptcy or,
as Best Energies put it “win[ning] the current land grab in next-generation
fuels”3.
IBI lobbyists promote an image of a future industry which primarily
benefit small farmers and other villagers, through small pyrolysis
units and charcoal-making cooking stoves, yet many of their spokespeople
call for “biochar” ‘carbon sequestration’ targets which would make
half a billion hectares of biochar plantations sound conservative.
“Biochar” thus fits in with other false climate solutions based
on large-scale plantations and land-grabbing, from agrofuels to
‘carbon sink’ tree plantations and GE trees. The scientific rationale
for “biochar” is even shakier than for many other false solutions:
Agrofuels, however harmful, can at least power cars. Applying charcoal
to soils, on the other hand has not been shown to reliably sequester
carbon or make soil more fertile on its own. The ‘evidence’ for
the claims is based primarily on terra preta, ancient soils in Central
Amazonia, formed hundreds or even thousands of years ago. Terra
preta was created by small farmers who, over many generations, mixed
charcoal as well as compost, animal and fish bones, river sediments,
manure and diverse biomass residues into the soil. There is no evidence
that carbon-rich, fertile soils can be recreated simply – or quickly
– by applying large quantities of charcoal to fields.
So far only one “biochar” field study has been published in peer-reviewed
journals. Researchers found that, charcoal additions to soil made
synthetic nitrogen fertilisers work better. Yields for plants grown
with char and fertilisers were still considerably lower than for
plants grown solely with chicken manure. Using nothing but charcoal,
however, resulted in zero plant growth after two harvests. This
is why a lot of the ‘biochar research’ actually involves an ammonium
bicarbonate fertiliser, of which char is only one component. At
least during this short-term study, most of the carbon remained
in the soil, but other studies indicate that even this is not guaranteed.
A study in Kenya showed that over the first 20-30 years after biomass
burning, soils lost 72% of the carbon contained in charcoal.4 Initial
results of a Colombian field study show that plots with charcoal
had higher yields but lost 60% more soil carbon than control plots
over two years.5 This makes claims about biochar having the potential
to sequester carbon on a geo-engineeering scale little more than
hot air.
The push for “”biochar today can be compared with that for agrofuels
around 2002: Unfounded promises to solve the climate crisis and
poverty with one stroke, while, behind the scenes, a massive lobbying
effort is paving the way for artificial markets through state support.
By the end of this year, the biochar lobby could well succeed in
getting “biochar” into the CDM and other carbon trading schemes
from 2012, possibly with ‘double credits’, as well as gaining other
state support. Once this is in place, major industry investment
and plantation expansion will follow. Several Indonesian pulp and
paper companies, the executive director of the Indonesian palm oil
association, Embrapa in Brazil, the Bolivian agribusiness firm DESA
in Santa Cruz and Shell are amongst those already promoting the
idea. The question is whether civil society groups and movements
will be able to organise quickly enough and succeed in stopping
the push for industrial biochar and, above all, carbon trading in
charcoal as a soil amendment(“biochar”). If we fail this year then
we could soon find ourselves fighting against another wave of land-grabbing
and forest and other ecosystem destruction.
By Almuth Ernsting, Biofuelwatch, http://www.biofuelwatch.org.uk,
e-mail: info@biofuelwatch.org.uk
References:
For fuller information see in particular Section 4 of “Climate Geo-engineering
with ‘Carbon Negative’ Bioenergy”, www.biofuelwatch.org.uk/docs/cnbe/cnbe.html
1. www.biochar.org/joomla/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=51&Itemid=3
2. www.biochar-international.org/timflannery.html
3. www.bestenergies.com/aboutus.html
4. www.springerlink.com/content/0h15324rrg7k5061/
5. www.biochar-international.org/images/J_Major_biogeochem.pdf