29 March 2012

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

Posted in News, Biomass, Climate , 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.
But is this practical or a pipe dream? That’s what Brown and his colleagues at Iowa State and its Bioeconomy Institute want to find out, as they explained this week at a two-day workshop on biochar -- that’s the term used for the charcoal created when biomass is decomposed at high heat, in a process called pyrolysis. The workshop was part of the Carbon War Room‘s Creating Climate Wealth Summit in Washington, D.C..

The Carbon War Room, as you may know, is a nonprofit created by Richard Branson of Virgin fame to unlock gigaton-scale, market-driven solutions to climate change. Its new president will be Jose Maria Figueres, the former president of Costa Rica. The group is also tackling projects around energy efficiency, renewable jet fuel, low-carbon ocean shipping and sustainable livestock. Biochar has been around for a long time, but it’s getting new attention from government and business. The Iowa State researchers last fall were awarded a $25 million research grant from USDA to see if they can find ways to use marginal farmlands to grow perennial grasses and turn them into biofuels and biochar. Local firms like ADM, the agribusiness giant, have expressed support.

This week’s biochar workshop attracted an interesting crowd. USDA was there, as were executives from Conoco Phillips (they are interested in biofuels), Tenaska Energy (also biofuels), Phycal (which makes fuels from cassava and algae), Cool Planet Biofuels (a California startup funded by Google that is working on negative-carbon fuels, using miscanthus, among other feedstocks) and Biochar Solutions (which makes machinery to make biochar.) It’s very, very small but a biochar industry seems to be taking root.
Biochar, as I wrote last summer, can be traced back to Brazil, where dark soils in the Amazon region are known as “Terra Preta.” Some scientists believe they were created as long as 4,500 years ago, and that they helped support a complex, farm-based civilization in the Amazon, despite the region’s poor soil.

Biochar isn’t just one thing, as Brown explained. It can be made using different processes from cellulosic feedstocks including wood chips, switch grass or corn stover, or from lipid-rich biomass such as rapeseed, soybeans or micro-algae. Essentially, through, the idea is to speed up and optimize the natural process in which plants (carbohydrates) decompose into fuels (hydrocarbons).

Here’s how the Carbon War Room explains it

High-yielding varieties of terrestrial plants or aquatic species are used to fix carbon in the form of biomass. The biomass is collected and through an oxygen-starved process known as pyrolysis, is converted to an energy-rich liquid called bio-oil and a carbon-rich solid called biochar.

The bio-oil is upgraded to transportation fuels or used to generate electric power, thus providing high-value products to the economy. The biochar is incorporated into farmland where it serves the triple purposes of sequestering carbon from the atmosphere for millenia, building soil carbon and recycling nutrients removed with harvested biomass.

Iowa State has a small processing unit that can process about 1/4 ton per day of biomass, Brown told me. The researchers are feeding it switchgrass, wood chips and corn stover (the non-edible parts of corn plants, which, needless to say, are plentiful in Iowa.) Many obstacles remain to taking biochar to scale as a climate solution. For one thing, Iowa farmers aren’t particularly interested in biochar, at least not in paying for it -- perhaps because their soils are among the richest in the world. The agricultural benefits of biochar -- its ability to retain water or nutrients -- remain largely unproven.

David Laird, an Iowa State soil scientist who is working on the project, said that in a dry year, soil enriched with biochar “could have a significant positive impact on crop yields” by retaining water. “But in a wet year, that’s meaningless,” he noted. Biochar would probably have a far greater value if it could be used to enrich poor quality soil, where it could not only increase crop yields but drive up land values. In Africa, for instance, some people say biochar could have a big impact on agriculture.

The USDA grant and other funding will enable the Iowa State team to better understand both the science and economics of biochar and biofuels. They’ll have to wrestle with some tradeoffs: So-called fast pyrolysis processes biomass at high heat, which makes more fuel and less biochar; that’s good for the business model, not so good for climate impact. By contrast, slow pyrolysis generates more biochar to sequester but less fuel to take to market. Meanwhile, Brown and Laird are experimenting with biochar in their own backyards. Brown says he grew six-foot-tall pepper plants, and Laird has been growing tomato plants. How are the tomatoes doing, I asked him.”They’re great,” he replied. “But it has nothing to do with me, and a lot to do with my wife.”

Comments (14)

  • Sukhpreet

    Sukhpreet

    14 June 2012 at 18:10 |
    It's not clear from the spread sheet wheehtr the co2 emissions associated with ethanol production was taken to account as well as the electricity production cost. Coal is presently the largest source of electricity nationwide, this could be improved in the future, model states, like California already provide much cleaner electricity.I'm troubled by the use of food as a fuel, the increased use of food production land in the corn belt, already suffering a diminishing water supply may result in food shortages in the future, a more serious serious situation than high fuel prices. Future cellulose and waste based ethanol production looks like a more practicable approach.
  • Daniel

    Daniel

    25 May 2012 at 01:12 |
    This report, which I heard this mrionng on my local NPR affiliate, is little more than a commercial bought and paid for by the forest industry. I look forward to the day when environmental groups are able to buy content like the forest industry has done through the American Forest Foundation .Nevermind the fact that the practice of using biomass as an energy source is neither sustainable nor healthy. It won't come close to satisfying our energy needs. Plus it ignores the fact that the brush and other biomass are necessary for a healthy forest in terms of healthy soil, humus, clean water, etc. Treating it as waste to be burned for an energy hungry nation is not viable on any number of levels. There was a clear conflict of interest in this report. You can do better.
  • Francisco

    Francisco

    24 May 2012 at 20:13 |
    Deborah- I live in a rural part of Missouri which has several corn based eatonhl plants nearby. Your report failed to mention the fact that it takes 4 gallons of water to produce one gallon of eatonhl. Many of the eatonhl plants have had to cut back production because of this fact and one plant did not get started because the locals fought it due to the loss of ther water table. Ethanol production is a resource intensive product. Were you aware that there has been a $.77/gallon subsidy for the production of eatonhl since 1977? Archer-Daniels-Midland is and has been producing eatonhl for many years (ADM also contributes large sums of money to political campaigns). I would suggest that E&S do better research of their stories before you air them.
  • Emma

    Emma

    24 May 2012 at 14:17 |
    The reality is that we live in a world still on corsue to have 9 billion people by the year 2050. We have not quite 7 billion now. And most of the world still aspires to the comfortable lifestyles that we in the U.S. enjoy. That takes energy. There is clearly a growing demand for energy. Perhaps there will come a day, within our lifetimes, when breakthroughs will be made that will show us a clear path toward the production of enough clean energy for all of us on Earth. These forest studies are simply steps along the road to finding that path. They are not the answer. They're just part of an ongoing process.Mark and Craig, thank you both for your comments. EarthSky is a voice for science, but all of our voices are needed all of our feelings and opinions and visions are needed to find the correct path.Deborah
  • Valquiria

    Valquiria

    24 May 2012 at 11:18 |
    Liza,I may be wrong but your post seems to give the AFF a pass. The AFF is an industry group that, among other thnigs, provides free material to teachers that advances the forest industry agenda, which is not necessarily pro forest. The dairy industry does the same as well as other industry groups. As a teacher, I'm well aware of the tactic. The driving force of these groups is profit not education.Their list of sponsors is the give away. Years ago these were the same groups who were advocating the practice of clear cutting to improve the forest. They are also now the same groups who advocate prescribed burns. In other words, they're getting taxpayer money to burn.I have decades of observing one of the sponsors, the Illinois Dept. of Natural Resources Division of Forestry, burn a large area of forest acreage on state land near my home. The damage done is a testament to the lie that prescribed burns are necessary to improve the forest.
  • Upasana

    Upasana

    24 May 2012 at 08:19 |
    As a landowner in a rural, foesterd area, I want to weigh in. I wonder what kind of scientific support there is that cutting and burning our forests for energy and fuel is going to promote a good economy in the rural areas which will supply the trees? I suggest that science shows otherwise.Undisturbed forests provide ecosystem services. For example, a significant portion of the grown wood in a forest remains in the system as stored carbon. Removing that from the system and burning it certainly results in stored carbon being released to the atmosphere, contributing to climate change. Mature forests produce oxygen, scrub particulates from the air, protect watersheds, provide beauty, habitat and environmental stability, as other examples of ecosystem services. Economists are beginning to value these services in dollars. The benefits are substantial. We need to properly value our forests before we decide to sell off a significant portion of them. We also need to start viewing forests differently. Wood is not the only product that comes from a forest, and uncut forests are very valuable. It was disappointing to hear this kind of industry propoganda. It was very shallow and weak.
  • Omen

    Omen

    23 May 2012 at 23:18 |
    Please excuse my butnitg in from the other side of the planet,but I stumbled onto your discussion by accident and felt that some important points had to be made.My wife and I are trying to reforest cleared , badly degraded ,farmland and are watching the developements in biomass energy with interest as it will provide a market for the thinnings and lower grade offcuts that are normally just a fire hazard waiting to happen.There is a lot of poor quality farmland around here that should never have been cleared ,and a good result for us may encourage some of our neighbours to look at forestry in a different light.At this stage, whenever the subject comes up, the first question is what about the greenies? .I know what they mean,I come from 5 generations of tree growers, mixed age, mixed species, natural australian forest.When others tripled the value of their land by clearing it or magnified its value tenfold by housing subdivisions, my family stuck with forestry, with interfearance from people who should have been trying to help. If the green movement had decided to back sustainable forestry instead of concrete, steel, plastic etc the planet would be in a lot better shape.
  • Andry

    Andry

    09 April 2012 at 17:35 |
    The problem with that point of view (just going to do a little forest cleanup and use the waste) is that it isn't realistic. The amount of material needed to sustain this industry is a lot more than just cleaning up a little brush. You are talking about building factories and keeping them supplied constantly. The demand will grow and will require mechanized forestry, and large acreages. An industry such as this will have a significant impact on a region's environment. We already have more than one highly mechanized industry utilizing our forests.
    We have only the tiniest of examples, probably 1% or less, of old growth forest that has survived the European settlement of the eastern U.S. If we want to move toward any kind of environmental stability, we need to be increasing the amount of landbase which is allowed to succeed to climax communities. The value of that to society, I believe, is much greater than what you get from cutting and burning the wood.
    I'm all for finding environmentally sound alternatives to the coal and fossil fuel and nuclear energy infrastructure that we have but which has and is damaging the environment. But burning wood for energy production isn't my idea of an environmentally sound alternative.

    Andry
  • Flavio

    Flavio

    09 April 2012 at 13:27 |
    With this minute and a half mriofencial dedicated to advancing the bottom lines of the corporate interests and funders of Earth and Sky, a line has been crossed, ethically, journalistically and scientifically.Please, in what little remains of the eleventh hour of our planet, refrain from such obfuscation and misinformation around turning our forests into ethanol as a good thing. The explicit message is food versus fuel is all we have to be concerned with. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Most people can rightfully intuit forests have functions that go beyond corporate profiteering from ethanol blends. That the taxpayer is subsidizing 51 cents a gallon for ethanol production is reprehensible in itself.While we can understand Earth and Sky's deep appreciation for its corporate funders such as the American Forest Foundation, Shell, Monsanto, BP and others deeply invested in the biomass industry, there's two decades of science to draw from to give us serious pause. From that science we can grasp the foolishness of thinking biomass is going to solve our problem of fossil fuel dependence creating catastrophic climate change. Reducing forests to ethanol greatly worsens the mass extinction going on, and accelerates ocean acidification and global climate change. Biomass removal destroys structure and function of forest ecosystems and massive species declines are already our fate. The harm resulting from carbon released by forest biomass removal far exceeds any purported efficiencies your report blithely claims. Forests have functioned as carbon sinks, carbon reservoirs, essential plant and animal habitat, regulators of weather, and are necessary to sustaining watershed functions to name a few other benefits besides corporate commodities.
  • Geone

    Geone

    09 April 2012 at 10:54 |
    Deborah. I am sorry Earth and Sky took this unbalanced apaporch to the issue of biofuels from forests. Preaching the AFF and biofuels industry party line on a science show without a discussion on the full impacts is irresponsible. Yes, we will be able to see more sky with the tree gone. The thinning and debris touted by the biofuels lobby is a trojan horse. I have been engaged in forums with these people for well over a decade, desparately seeking one biofuels proposal that can any way be proven to be sustainable over time. The litumus test.. show me one bioengery operation that plants, grows, harvests, processes, and distributes its product using soley it\'s own product while making a profit , went unanswered with resounding silence. We would need much more than the available land mass of the US to grow enough biofuels to replace our oil consumption. As we\'ve already seen with the corn biofuel scam, the foreseeable consequences have shown up in the form of of higher food prices, higher fertilizer prices, the growth of the hypoxic zone in the Gulf of Mexico, groundwater contamination and escalating land prices. Biofuels enterprise, particularly cellulosic ethanol, require vast amounts of forests to be economically viable even with subsidies. The thinning, waste and debris that the industry pretends to be targeting are actually the more vital nutrients for overall forest health since undergrowth, limbs and other understory non-tree species contain most of the recyclable nutrients. Tree make up on average only 15% of forest flora species. The mere act of mechanically removing thinnings, waste and debris will severely impact biodiversity in forests, essentially turning them into biological desert plantations. The real target for these industries are the forests themselves. It would behoove you to do some research on the subject and provide more balanced shows. As it is now, it appears that E&S has become yet another industry tool. I once enjoyed and respected your show. Sorry to see it go down this path.
  • Norma

    Norma

    08 April 2012 at 12:43 |
    We don't have congressmen here, but I am sure that our local lunivaeeqt would be interested in any idea that leads to self-reliance for our part of the north of our state of our nation/island/continent not for reasons of ecology or ethics, but for reasons more parochial. And, that is the beauty of such a pragmatic approach to what you are doing it is so extraordinarily practical and steeped so deeply in pragmatics that it can easily be sold as common sense, without any need to mention the dreaded E word to those who view environmentalists as a blight upon the (human) landscape.Nice one (again), Rob.I look forward to monitoring you continued progress with this.Bryan
  • Isaias

    Isaias

    08 April 2012 at 11:32 |
    I am taking this all in and eidnwrong We have unworked, clay soil that had previously been lawn that we are trying to convert to a garden area. I sheet mulched with wheat straw this past fall and now I am interested in your method of trenching wood chip filled paths.I use pine chips to cover the floor my chicken's hutch. If I dig the trenches and fill them with the pine chips inoculated with the chicken's manure is this a good thing or a bad thing? I had been piling them up to compost them, and I did notice the mycorrhizae growing in the piles but will the chips straight from the hutch be too hot to use in the troughs? Will the undigested stuff be too much of a risk for the crops, or us? BTW, I grow all my root and lettuce crops in raised beds so I am pretty sure that this would not be so much of a health risk for us in the row gardens, yet I do wonder about the other issues.I appreciate your thoughts,Lynda
  • Kamini

    Kamini

    08 April 2012 at 11:06 |
    The problem is how to utgiinsdish between sound scientific and engineering understanding, wishful thinking, and special interest hype. In many cases we encounter mixtures of each. Unfortunately, the lay public is at a very significant disadvantage when it comes to evaluation of claims.Tad Patzek, UC Berkley, College of Engineering, Charles A. S. Hall, State University of New York, College of Environmental Science & Forestry and David Pimentel, Prof emeritus Cornell and perhaps some others have done very credible and detailed analysis of Biofuel cycles and have conclusively shown that no Biofuel cycles can ever be net energy positive. It's in the Thermodynamics. Beyond that, it is necessary that such biomass remain on the forest floor to maintain the health of the soil necessary to sustain the forest. Neither industrial mining of the forest overgrowth, forest floor or cropland can ever be net energy positive. If Patzeg is correct, and I have every reason to understand that he is correct, then it follows that Janaki Alavalapati who was interviewed on the Earth & Sky program must be dead wrong in his claim of the sustainability of harvesting Biomass from the forest floor.But it is Patzek's paper Thermodynamics of the Corn-Ethanol Biofuel Cycle which provides an excellent treatise on what is possible and not possible and what the terms Sustainable and Renewable actually mean. This is covered very nicely in Section II, Sustainability & Renewability and in several sections in the appendices of this paper. This paper does presuppose a good working knowledge of Thermodynamics that is beyond the level of introductory college physics, i.e. the Fist and Second laws of Thermodynamics. But much more important is that Patzek's message goes well beyond the issues surrounding Biofuels. He tells us (how to determine) what is possible and not possible.There is far too much gee wiz engineering and advocating from the uninformed going on everywhere, especially from special interests, in regard to the Energy Question. It's the whole System which must be understood. Everything is interconnected. But it is ultimately the continuous flow of free energy which enables anything to happen and the only indefinitely sustainable flow of free energy ultimately comes from the incident radiation from the sun. Some of that, a very small amount, was stored in fossil fuels over millions of years in the past. Some other free energy , a larger amount, is held in the the deposits of the U235 isotope and that could last for, perhaps, several thousands of years with fast breeder reactor technology. Atomic fusion might some day be possible and that would provide an effectively inexhaustible supply of free energy . So when we use the term Sustainable we really need to ask sustainable for how long . Radiation from the sun, which also drives the wind. ocean waves and etc, is an effectively inexhaustible but it is a very dilute inflow of free energy which, necessarily, requires concentration to be useful and that necessarily presents very significant and complex technological problems.Best regards, John King
  • Luzdeiny

    Luzdeiny

    08 April 2012 at 10:57 |
    We could also use to produce fire tgeinxuishers. And sell them to Sweden. When all of them has one of ours tgeinxuishers in their homes and business companies, we will activate the secret valve. When active, it will prevent all the fires. So, when they become tired of eating microwave food, we will take over. Sweden is ours!

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