Transcript
Page 1: “Biochar,” a bit of myth busting

“Biochar,” a bit of myth busting Lukas Van Zwieten

Principal Research ScientistAdjunct Professor, Rural Climate Solutions

University of New England

and

Tony WalkerRichmond Landcare

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What is biochar and how is it made?

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Biochar and Terra Preta

Downie, AE., Van Zwieten, L., Smernik RJ., Morris, S., Munroe, PR (2011) Terra Preta Australis: Reassessing the carbon storage capacity of temperate soils. Agriculture Ecosystems Environment 140, 137-147.

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Pyrolysis is an engineering term “energy and biochar can be produced”

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Biosecurity Odour Concentration of C and nutrients Transport costs Beneficial agricultural reuse Renewable energy

Why pyrolyse biomass

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Biochar is carbon that is going to last for hundreds of years

Biomass carbon100%

100 years

Bio-char carbon50%

Biomass carbon100%

Biomass carbon0%

Bio-char carbon>40%

Energy Production

A

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

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Agronomic trials

Over 350 plots being managed as part of the Richmond Landcare collaborative project

Key soil constraints on ferrosols Declining C Immobilisation of P Low pH High Al saturation Low CEC

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Control corn (13t cob/ha)

1200mm

1900mm

Poultry litter biochar, 50t/Ha (35t cob/ha)

Biochar “can” significantly improve soil fertility and crop production

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Long-term field sites testing biochar

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Trials in a macadamia orchard

45 trees used testing poultry litter char and greenwaste char (@10t/ha- 40kg per tree)

2 years on

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Trials in coffee

3.3kg per tree, 30 trees per block, 4 treatments, 4 replicates, testing poultry biochar and rice husk biochar

2 years on

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control 1% biochar 5% biochar

Sections of x-ray computed tomography scans of a vertosol soil, packed into tubes of ~ 30 mm, at a resolution of 70 µm

P Quin (PhD student) and I Young

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Summary of effects of some biochars in some soils

Nutrients Stable C content Liming effect Reactive surfaces and

redox CEC and AEC Porosity/ water holding

capacity and bulk density Porosity / microbial habitat Smoke chemicals?

• Increases in nutrient use efficiency allowing reduced fertiliser inputs

• Improved water use efficiency• Reduced leaching and gaseous losses

of fertiliser• Reduced denitrification• Lowered Al toxicity • Reduced heavy metal bioavailability• Increased P availability on P sorbing

soils• Improved mycorrhizae and biological N2

fixation • Long-term accumulation of soil C

Properties of biochar Soil and crop outcomes

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Myth Busting

Not all biochars will be valuable Biochars may not be beneficial in all soil types Value of the crop will limit application of biochar- and

bottom line Biochar certification is coming

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More myth busting

Understand biochar characteristics to ameliorate soil constraints

Farming system impacts the way biochar works: Possible C accumulation under permanent pasture, but tillage and biomass removal under cropping can still result in a decline in C

Biochar can particularly target chemical constraints in ferrosols including low pH, high Al availability and low P availability

Biochars with high mineral ash component are more effective at improving crop production

Biochars with high C content are more effective at accumulating additional C in soil