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USBI is currently a project of Sustainable Obtainable Solutions, your receipt will show SOS as the recipient. When making your donation please list USBI in the "designation" field and all funds will support USBI exclusively. Thank you. |
— Biochar Production—
The first evidence of charcoal made by humans being used as a soil amendment was in the Amazon Basin of South America over 2,500 years ago. Archaeological evidence suggests that ancient people piled and covered wood in earthen pits, then burned it slowly with limited air. This method, still used today in developing countries, creates considerable smoke and releases half the carbon dioxide (CO2) in the original biomass along with other greenhouse gasses (GHG's). That;s not healthy for people or the atmosphere and all that heat (energy) is wasted.
Capturing Energy— Today, biochar is produced using pyrolysis, that is, biomass is super-heated in the absence of oxygen at high temperatures (350-700° C) in specially designed furnaces. The most sustainable feed stocks are what's now considered waste: excess manure, wood debris, construction waste, slash from forest thinning, food processing waste, residue from methane digesters or urban tree trimmings. Most of this would be left to rot, be open-burned or dumped in a land fill. In this modern method, volatile gasses, hydrocarbons and most of the oxygen and hydrogen in the biomass are burned or driven off and captured, including GHG's. These captured emissions are known as syngas (synthetic gas) and can be used like natural gas. Liquids, called bio-oils, are also captured creating another source of energy, leaving carbon enriched biochar. The heat generated during the pyrolysis process can generate electricity too!
Industrial-sized units can handle tons of biomass on a daily basis. They can produce electricity as well as biochar, bio-oils and syngas in large quantities. These stationary units depend on a steady, sustainable supply of biomass, so need to be located where they can take advantage of reasonable haul distances for feed stocks.
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