25 August 2010

Biodiesel, Biochar & Biodiversity in Costa Rica

Posted in News, Energy, Project

An Example of Small-Scale, Locally-Appropriate Action

This is a guest post by Ryan King. Ryan is a biologist, independent journalist, and community “eco-preneur” in Costa Rica. Below, he provides a brief introduction to decentralized biodiesel and biochar production in Costa Rica. His story will interest readers for at least two reasons: (1) he outlines specific and repeatable measures to address peak oil and climate change through the synergy of local energy production and carbon sequestration; and (2) he provides a working example of the benefits of increasing localized self-sufficiency. Ryan is expanding biodiesel, biochar, environmental projects through eco-hotels and sustainability projects, as well as looking for funding and experienced and non-experienced participants to contribute.

Though Costa Rica markets itself as a pioneer in environmental protection, its national oil refinery, ‘RECOPE’ is still failing after more than two years since its pledge to introduce biodiesel, and the country has not been able to provide legitimate carbon negative programs. While some reforestation programs have received significant funding under the assumption that planting trees in tropical forests sequesters carbon in a way that is easily quantifiable, research indicates that tropical forests may increasingly become sources and not sinks of carbon as drought and climate change events worsen.

Costa Rica’s economy depends primarily on “eco-tourism,” and within areas dependent on fragile biodiversity and rapidly changing ecosystems decentralized energy and environmental solutions are desperately needed. My interest has been to begin exploring the means to introduce emerging non-hierarchical social organizational theory in environmental and alternative energy applications by spreading biodiesel and biochar programs through existing environmental education and eco-tourist projects.

While simple, local-scale projects such as the biodiesel and biochar projects discussed below individually make minute contributions to global change threats, their ease of application and potential to spread rapidly through networking, the internet, and community programs as well as ability to provide immediate economic and environmental benefits make them especially appealing. The last detail is crucial: solutions that are economically viable without reliance on outside subsidy or centralized control are urgently needed to directly benefit local biodiversity in threatened areas and to build community-scale self-sufficiency through improved soils and local energy and food production. Previous top-down approaches have been unable to distribute the technology or the awareness to adjust in the wake of the overwhelming failures of mainstream organizations and governments. As a result, and especially as the current economic downturn continues, alternative, networked distribution models will find increasing popularity and success.

Biochar has a wide variety of benefits to soils, including

• Enhanced plant growth
• Suppressed methane emission
• Reduced nitrous oxide emission (estimate 50%) (see 5.10 below)
• Reduced fertilizer requirement (estimate 10%)
• Reduced leaching of nutrients
• Stored carbon in a long term stable sink
• Reduces soil acidity: raises soil pH (see 5.01 below)
• Reduces aluminum toxicity
• Increased soil aggregation due to increased fungal hyphae
• Improved soil water handling characteristics
• Increased soil levels of available Ca, Mg, P, and K
• Increased soil microbial respiration
• Increased soil microbial biomass
• Stimulated symbiotic nitrogen fixation in legumes
• Increased arbuscular mycorrhyzal fungi
• Increased cation exchange capacity

Sources: Assessment of Biochar's Benefits for the USA, Steiner, ed.; Biochar Application to Soils, Verheijen, et al.; Sustainable Biochar to Mitigate Global Climate Change, Woolfe, et al.; Biochar Soil Management, Lehmann

Read full Project report The Oil Drum

Comments (5)

  • Furkan

    Furkan

    14 June 2012 at 17:22 |
    Thanks for this I've been working hard to get prerpaed with my loan modification process and trying to get a good understanding of everything I need to have in order. It's been stressful but I've found some great resources like this and am grateful.
  • Wegila

    Wegila

    25 May 2012 at 06:29 |
    4EverGreen13_TVshow is producing a doetmcnuary: 21st Century Advancements In BioDieselPolicy, Processing, Acquisition, Distribution & Carbon Credits If you have information regarding BioDiesel, please contact me.Also, please review pre-production BioDiesel doetmcnuary website.BioGREEiesel. com
  • Junior

    Junior

    24 May 2012 at 23:47 |
    When I pay a premium for my B100, I would like to think the craobn credits are retired by me.This is controversial in our coop. Some would like to sell them, take the money, and invest in craobn reductions.Others feel that we are reducing our footprint once, and that selling the offsets would be double dipping.Thanks for tackling this one
  • Junior

    Junior

    24 May 2012 at 23:47 |
    When I pay a premium for my B100, I would like to think the craobn credits are retired by me.This is controversial in our coop. Some would like to sell them, take the money, and invest in craobn reductions.Others feel that we are reducing our footprint once, and that selling the offsets would be double dipping.Thanks for tackling this one
  • Zvezdelin

    Zvezdelin

    23 May 2012 at 23:20 |
    While I see the value in high level cap&trade markets for carobn emissions, there should be a better way. For instance, Propel can deliver specific biodiesel use metrics to our customers. Is there a place for a ground up, community and small business oriented carobn trade market ? The Chigaco Climate Exchange doesn't work for many of our customers. Since carobn emissions extend to everyone- it follows there should be a way for everyone to reap some benefit from reducing emissions. I'll keep digging on this. There's a business opportunity for someone buried in here.

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