29
Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Julie MajorPh.D. candidate, Cornell UniversityExtension Director, International Biochar Initiative

Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Page 2: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Fertile Soils in an Unfertile Soilscapethe central Amazon

© J

. Maj

or, 2

003

“Terra Preta”‘normal’ soil

Page 3: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

“Terra Preta”: Amazonian Dark Earths

© B. Glaser © B. Glaser © J. Major

Page 4: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

The Properties of Terra Preta

Organic Carbon (mg g-1)

0 10 20 30

Cat

ion

Exc

hang

e C

apac

ity (

mm

olc

kg-1

)

0

100

200

300

r2=0.909CEC=2.81C+9.1

r2=0.784CEC=8.60C-18.6

Anthrosols

Adjacent Soils

DSACULGHAT

Other Anthrosols

(Sombroek et al., 1993)

Liang, Lehmann et al., 2006, Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 70: 1719-1730

Terra Preta

‘normal soil’

Page 5: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

The Discovery of Biochar

0

20

40

60

80

100

0 100 200 300

Black carbon [g kg-1 C]

Terra Preta

‘normal soil’

Glaser et al., 2001, Naturwissenschaften 88, 37-41

© G

lase

r

Terra Preta

‘normal’ soil

Depth [cm]

Ages between 500 and 7,000 years!

Biochar (g/kg C)

Page 6: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Days

10 20 30 40 50

Calc

ium

cum

ula

tive le

ach

ing [

kg h

a-1]

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

Ferralsol

Terra Preta

The Properties of Terra Preta

Ca

15

33

Plant-available Ca:(Mehlich-3)

Lehmann et al., 2003, Plant and Soil 249: 343-357

(N=5)

‘normal soil’

Page 7: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

The Value of Terra Preta

© Woods

FarmingOrnamentals

© Woods

© Lehmann

Page 8: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

What is Biochar?Biochar is the product of the thermal degradation of organic matterin the absence of oxygen

Hardwood Rice hulls Switchgrass Bagasse

© J

. M

ajo

r 2

00

8

Page 9: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

What is Biochar?

Julie Major
Biochar is NOT mineral coal, ash
Page 10: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

How much Biochar is in Soil naturally?

Proportion of black C (% of organic C)

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70

Fre

quen

cy (

% o

f so

ils s

tudi

ed)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

Soil orders include Alfisols, Vertisols, Inceptisols, Entisols, Ultisols, and Mollisols; data taken from Skjemstad et al. (1996, 1999a, 2001, 2002), Schmidt et al. (1999), Carter et al. (2002).

(N=57)

About 20% of Carbon

Page 11: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

How can Biochar be obtained?

www.midsummerwood.co.uk

www.wealddown-schools.org.uk

Wikipedia

Page 12: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Biochar application

Page 13: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Core Benefits of Biochar

High Stability of Organic

Matter

High Retention of

Nutrients

Very likely soil water improvements

Possible to likely microbial benefits

Page 14: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Bio-char additions [t C ha-1]

0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140

Pla

nt b

iom

ass

prod

uctio

n[%

incr

ease

]

0

50

100

200

250

Sustainable Agriculture

Lehmann and Rondon, 2006, Bio-char Soil Management on Highly Weathered Soils in the Humid Tropics . Francis and Taylor, FL, pp. 517-530

Results from 24 experiments and10 different cropsWithout Biochar

using best management

Up to 230% yield increase!

0 t/ha 8 t/ha 20 t/ha

Page 15: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

The Benefits of Biochar Direct nutrient ADDITION

Biochar (g kg-1)

Availab

leK (cmolc kg-

1)

Availabl

e Ca(cmolc kg-

1)

Available Mg

(cmolc kg-1)

Total

N(g kg-1)

Available P

(mg kg-1)

0 2.8 1.5 0.9 3.2 8

135 25.8 1.7 1.0 4.0 11

Data for an Oxisol, Lehmann et al. (2002) World Congress of Soil Science

Page 16: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

The Benefits of Biochar Nutrient RETENTION

CEC ↑ up to 50% pH ↑ up to 1.2 units

H+

NO3-NH4

+

Loss togroundwater?

(reviewed by Glaser Lehmann Zech, 2002, Biol. Fert. Soils)

1 mm

Less charge

More charge

+

+ +

__

__

Page 17: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

The Benefits of BiocharCa

Nut

rien

t am

ount

(kg

ha-1

)

-60

-40

-20

0

20

40

60 Crop uptake Leaching by saturated flow Leaching by unsaturated flow

Mg

-40

-20

0

20

40

K

Biochar application rate (t ha-1)

0 20-50

0

50

100

150

200

250

300NO3 + NH4*

Biochar application rate (t ha-1)

0 20

-100

-50

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

ab

ab

b

aa

b

ba a b

a b

Page 18: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

The Benefits of Biochar

0

20

40

60

80

100

Grass Maize

mg

N2O

m-2

y-1 0

20

M. Rondon, unpubl.

Reduction in nitrous oxide emission from soil

Pasture grass Maize

+Biochar

+Biochar

Page 19: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Biochar lasts longer in soil

Lehmann et al., 2006, Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change

100

50

10

1 32

Biochar

Un-charred organic matter

4 5

Years

Carb

on

rem

ain

ing

(%

)

Page 20: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Carbon sequestration in soil

Biomass carbon100%

100 years

Bio-char carbon50%

Biomass carbon100%

Biomass carbon0%

Bio-char carbon>40%

Energy Production

A

Lehmann et al., 2006, Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change

Biochar carbon

Biochar carbon

Page 21: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

The VisionBiochar with Bio-energy = carbon negative + environmentally friendly!

Lehmann, 2007, Frontiers in Ecology and theEnvironment 7, 381-387

Lehmann, 2007, Nature 447, 143-144

Page 22: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

International Biochar Initiative (IBI)

www.biochar-international.org

•Registered NGO•“Supporting researchers, commercial entities, policy makers,development agents, farmers and gardenersand others committed to supporting sustainable biocharproduction and utilization systems that Remove carbon from the atmosphere and enhance the earth’s soils

Page 23: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

IBI conferences

Terrigal, NSW, Australia April 2007 107 attendees from 13 countries

Newcastle, UK September 2008 225 attendees from 31 countries

Page 24: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Upcoming events

IBI conference in Rio de Janeiro, Brasil: 2010 IBI conference in Kyoto, Japan: 2011

Regional meetings: May 2009: Regional Conference of Asia-Pacific Region

in Australia August 2009: Regional Conference of Americas Region

in Boulder, CO USA  Date TBD: Regional Conference of European region in

Rome, Italy

Page 25: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

IBI 6-country project

Chile (Atacama desert) Costa Rica (Osa peninsula) Belize (Cacao growers/small farmers) India Viet Nam Kenya (cook stoves at household level)

Page 26: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Policy activities

Farm Bill in USA Poznan, Poland

Projects in WV Ohio

Page 27: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Multiple environmental benefits

FeedstockFeedstock(biomass)(biomass)

ReactorReactor BioBio--fuelfuel(e.g., bio(e.g., bio--oil, oil, hydrogen)hydrogen)

ElectricityElectricity

BioBio--charchar

GasesGases

Bio-energy power plantAgricultural/forest fields

Biomass

Bio-char

Saving of a portion of fertilizers

Sustainable land use

Reduction of off-site pollution

Bio-c

har

Agricultural/forest fields

Climate change mitigation

Agricultural/forest fields

Bio-char

Bio-char

Page 28: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

Thank you!

Honduras, Jan. ‘08

Page 29: Julie Major Ph.D. candidate, Cornell University Extension Director, International Biochar Initiative Biochar 101 and IBI activities

How much would YOU be willing to pay for Biochar?