06 September 2011

Melbourne to get first biochar plant

Posted in News, Biochar, Project

Stores as much as 50,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide a year

THE country's first commercial biochar plant, to turn green waste into energy and store carbon dioxide, will be built in Melbourne after State Energy Minister Michael O'Brien awarded a $4.5 million grant to Pacific Pyrolysis. PacPyro's ''carbon-negative electricity'' pilot-scale project will turn two tonnes of municipal organic and wood waste an hour into electricity and biochar and store as much as 50,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide a year.
It will be built over the next 12-18 months at one of the existing suburban waste facilities operated by partner Transpacific Industries, which will provide the feedstock. PacPyro's chief technology officer Adriana Downie said the $10 million project would be the first in Australia to make marketable quantities of biochar, which would be sold as a soil enhancer for a few hundred dollars a tonne, a price comparable to premium potting mix.

Biochar, the product of slow pyrolysis or burning without oxygen, has attracted significant interest from both sides of politics because of its potential to draw down large quantities of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, while generating energy. Biochar is recognised under the federal Carbon Farming Initiative, meaning PacPyro will be able to sell carbon credits to polluters liable under the proposed federal carbon tax regime, as well as electricity into the grid and renewable energy certificates.

Ms Downie said at a carbon price of $23 a tonne, the project would generate credits worth $1 million a year. ''If the [carbon tax] goes through, there's going to be billions of dollars in this space.'' A government spokesman confirmed that conditional funding support had been offered to PacPyro but said the project was at a very preliminary stage.

The grant was from the Victorian government's Energy Technology Innovation Strategy, designed to support projects with high technology risk. The strategy received an extra $41 million funding in the last budget.The spokesman said the increase - almost double the program's funding under Labor - showed the Coalition was ''putting serious money into renewable and low-emissions technology''.
Source Sydney Morning Herald

Comments (4)

  • Shilpi

    Shilpi

    24 May 2012 at 09:03 |
    I work for a small agency (owned by local grevonment, but privately held) and we have off every other Friday. Our office is divided into an A group and B group. So they aren't saving any $$$ because one group is here on Fridays. I work 7:30am to 4:30pm with an hour lunch. One day a week I will work 7:30am to 6pm. You can make up the time anyway you want, as long as you do it. I must say that it is the most wonderful thing. I use that off Friday to run tons of my errands that I would not want to do on Saturday or Sunday. I could not imagine having to work every single Friday...seems so harsh!
  • Roberto

    Roberto

    24 May 2012 at 05:54 |
    My dad works at the university in town and a colpue years ago, they moved to 4.5 day weeks. I believe they work 7:30-5 Monday through Thursday and 7:30-12:30 on Fridays. He loves it. Seems like that could be the happy medium between a 5 day week and a 4 day week, because really, I think 10 hour days are too much.I feel like, with a 4-day work week, the 3-day weekend doesn't really make up for that time in the evenings. The weekday evenings are when kids would need help with their homework and projects.At my company, we always suggest early Fridays to my boss and she always comes back with working longer the other 4 days. We always shut up after that.
  • Kizzy

    Kizzy

    09 April 2012 at 12:36 |
    Hi,
    I just recently atertsd reading your blog. It is wonderfully inspiring. All this talk of being carbon negative and regenerating soils makes me want to share this with you: The Carbon Farmers of America ( www.carbonfarmersofamerica.com). They are a group of pasture-raised livestock ranchers in the Northeast who are using intensively managed livestock to stimulate grass (via chomping down) to promote root shedding, decompostion, and ultimately a regenerated topsoil and carbon sink.
    Carbon negativity and topsoil building is all possible!
  • Iveta

    Iveta

    09 April 2012 at 05:33 |
    Absolutely any carbon suorce will work. We have run everything from chicken manure to sawdust to sewage, er, bio-solids . The trick is to get it dense enough to sustain the temps, and chunky enough to let air in. Hence our push for pelletizing and the use of a hammer mill. That way everything from corn stover to switchgrass to cardboard can be run through with relatively little adjustments as the pellets will have roughly the same shape and density. Oak sawdust will still give more btu's per pound than willow but willow is alot cheaper!

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