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General biochar news

07 April 2012

Increase in U.S. Funding to Drought Relief in the Horn of Africa

Posted in Biochar, News, Policy, Project, Soil, Technology

Address the root causes of hunger and food insecurity by improving agricultural systems in the Horn of Africa under the Feed the Future initiative

Increase in U.S. Funding to Drought Relief in the Horn of Africa
The U.S. State Department announced:
The United States continues to be deeply concerned by the humanitarian emergency in the Horn of Africa, and particularly the hard-hit Somali population. Despite the end of famine conditions in February, nearly 10 million people in the region still require humanitarian assistance. For this reason, the United States Government is providing an additional nearly $50 million in aid for refugees and drought-affected communities in Somalia, Ethiopia, and Kenya in addition to what we have already provided.

07 April 2012

Gardeners should end their love affair with peat

Posted in News, Biomass, Science, Soil

Mining peat unlocks stored carbon into the atmosphere, and there are far better alternatives to help your garden grow

Gardeners should end their love affair with peat
The Guardian writes:
There has been a huge effort to phase out the use of peat by both amateur and professional gardeners. Defra has been at the forefront, with support from B&Q. So it is surprising that B&Q is increasing the use of peat this year and more so given that it is a member of the Horticultural Trades Association's Growing Media Initiative and ran its own peat-free campaign last year.

30 March 2012

Australia: Biochar enters the marketplace

Posted in Biochar, News, Market, Technology

After years of research and development, the coproduction of biochar and bioenergy in a modern slow-pyrolysis facility, is coming closer to commercial reality in Australia.

By Dr Adriana Downie for Eco Generation magazine March/April 2012.

Pacific Pyrolysis (PacPyro) has been offered $4.5 million by the Victorian Government to pilot a commercial-scale production facility in Melbourne. The project will demonstrate PacPyro’s proprietary technology’s ability to deliver a solution for urban green and wood waste by converting it into renewable electricity and biochar.

29 March 2012

Biochar action T-Shirts

Posted in News, Project

Now with Glow in the Dark effect

You can buy now "Biochar action T-Shirts" with glow in the dark effect. This is a pretty cool idea to spread the message about this high potential soil amendment and to support the Biochar Earth Network!

Available through Europe and United States Spreadshirt (see links below).

29 March 2012

How Homegrown Charcoal May Get Your Garden Through A Drought

Posted in News, Biochar, Science, Soil

Biochar will really improve the soil's capacity to hold water

Eliza Barclay from NPR writes:
You've probably heard of compost – that thick chocolate-colored stuff that's an organic gardener's best friend and supplies plants with all kinds of succulent nutrients.

But what about biochar? It's another ancient farming material made from slow-burned wood (also known as charcoal) that holds nutrients and water into soil without them draining away. And lately it has enjoyed a certain revival because it can also pull and store the carbon in greenhouse gases from the air. Everyone from California grape growers to home gardeners on YouTube is trying it out.

29 March 2012

New Soil Reef and Organic Mechanics Blend Creates the Perfect Soil Amendment

Posted in News, Biochar, Biomass, Market, Project, Soil, Technology

One of the most important things a gardener can do to boost crop productivity and reduce the amount of water and fertilizers needed is create rich, porous soil

New Soil Reef and Organic Mechanics Blend Creates the Perfect Soil Amendment
From PR Web: Worm condos. Terra Preta. Black Gold. Whatever it’s called, healthy soil is the most important tool in successful gardening. With the new Soil Reef™ blend being launched this spring, gardeners can create a healthy, organic and permanent home for beneficial organisms living in the soil.

The new blend combines OMRI-listed compost and worm castings from Organic Mechanics® with biochar, adding a unique porous carbon to the soil to create a habitat for life to thrive. How does it work? Soil Reef creates a network of nearly permanent, natural carbon structures throughout your soil, which hold onto water and nutrients, and create homes for microorganisms.

29 March 2012

Is a carbon-negative economy a practical possibility or a pipe dream?

Posted in News, Climate , Biomass, Energy, Market, Policy, Project, Science, Soil, Technology

Let’s not simply reduce the CO2 emissions going up into the atmosphere. Let’s draw them down

Is a carbon-negative economy a practical possibility or a pipe dream?
Marc Gunther from GreenBiz.com writes:
So says Robert Brown, a professor of engineering at Iowa State University and a leader of the university’s Initiative for a Carbon Negative Economy and its Bioeconomy Institute. Those are interdisciplinary campus efforts to develop ways to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by growing plants or algae, making them into fuels and burying their carbon residues in soil -- and make money doing it.

The notion that we can generate wealth and remove CO2 from the air is obviously appealing. As atmospheric concentrations of CO2 rise and climate risks grow, so does the need for carbon-negative technologies that pull CO2 from the air, as plants do, and then store it underground or deep in the ocean.

19 March 2012

Current state of biochar progress

Written by Imogen Reed, Posted in News, Biochar, Policy, Project, Science, Soil, Technology

The Latest Biochar Projects in the Developed World

Current state of biochar progress
The use of Biochar to act as a carbon sink is causing quite a stir among environmentalists and scientists alike. This ancient technology of burning organic matter then burying it in the ground to fertilize crops may have been around for over 3000 years in the Amazon Basin, but the research that shows that this method of fertilization will also absorb some of the carbon in the atmosphere means that this could be a really viable solution to the long term problem of carbon over production.
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