Photo of Biochar in Use
Photo of Biochar in Use

Biochar Carbon Accounting and Climate Change

The international research effort on biochar continues to indicate that biochar production and use has the potential to fight global warming by holding carbon in soil instead of releasing it into the atmosphere. There are several pathways by which biochar can accomplish emissions offsets.

The most immediate path to consider is the direct burial of highly recalcitrant char in soil. This pathway has the obvious advantage of providing a physical pool of carbon that is measurable and verifiable. However, while biochar is far more stable in soil than other forms of organic matter, monitoring will still be required to determine biochar residence times in a variety of soils and for different types of biochar.

Other, more indirect pathways include:

  • Avoided emissions of N2O and methane from soil
  • Displaced fertilizer and agricultural inputs
  • More fertile soil to boost food security and preserve cropland diversity
  • Fossil fuel displacement

Carbon accounting is a complex and dynamic field. As researchers delve further into concepts and methodologies for establishing robust biochar carbon accounting systems, they will have many parameters to consider.

A new report (draft in review) prepared by the Climate Trust for the California Energy Commission entitled Carbon Market Investment Criteria for Biochar Projects as an assessment of biochar to determine its appropriateness as a terrestrial carbon sequestration offset project. Click here for the full report.

For more on biochar and carbon accounting, see Chapter 18: Biochar, greenhouse gas accounting and emissions trading, by John Gaunt, GY Associates, UK and Annette Cowie, New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, in the book Biochar for Environmental Management, published by Earthscan.