donniecash818, to random

Well well well look who's concerned about climate all of a sudden

GreenFire,
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

@jgkoomey @ClipHead @donniecash818
C'mon man. Just because some people oversold some offsets over a decade ago is no reason to trash an important aspect of our response to global warming.

And that you keep asserting that is too expensive just indicates that you've not spent a minute learning about or enhanced rock weathering, but whatever.

Hellybootwader, to gardening
@Hellybootwader@mastodon.scot avatar

Mentioned this earlier in a reply without hashtags.
If you have a garden or access to outdoor space- you might be interested to learn that you can help store carbon in your garden.

Pull carbon right out of the air and fix it into plants and soil.

It’s a really basic introduction, all ideas you can follow up if they sound useful. I wrote it last year while at a previous job.

https://ninewellsgarden.org.uk/2022/08/03/gardening-for-the-climate/

GreenFire, to climate
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

Putting into concrete mixes is a definite and would be a good place to start putting pyrolyzed plastic waste too imo.

I haven't read this whole review article so not sure how close we might be towards drawing down gigatons of carbon dioxide to mitigate our and then sequestering it into the cement we need to use to build buildings and infrastructure necessary to adapt to the we've caused. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0958946523002780

GreenFire, to climate
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

If you are the type of person that cares about #GlobalWarming than you buy carbon credits.

I encourage you to buy physical #biochar. Something you can buy and use. Turf, gardens, trees and shrubs all benefit from this activated charcoal.

Then speak with your municipality and request they invest in biochar to improve green space and sequester carbon.

The more biochar we buy, the more credits will be available, the more the facilities will scale. #ClimateSolutions https://puro.earth/CORC-co2-removal-certificate/

RJ, to architecture

So much YES. Would love to connect with fellow enthusiasts and professionals working in the field, and engage more actively, bringing in my own expertise of working in high end interiors and architecture. If that's you, please reach out, boost, connect.

https://youtu.be/oVBnp8YRK0s

We OBVIOUSLY can't 'keep on keeping on' and design our built environment like we don't know how fundamentally flawed our design principles and construction methods are.

Let's embrace new aesthetics and look forward, not back. Bauhaus was relevant at the time, it's history now. Let's move on. Let's question every single choice in the design process and make better decisions. Educate our clients. Throw those outdated concepts overboard of what is aesthetically pleasant, what is deemed high-end.

Nobody will enjoy marbled lobbies, airconditioned greenhouse towers and concrete buildings on a dead planet. The future is now. Let's design and build it together!

mattotcha, to random
@mattotcha@mastodon.social avatar
GreenFire, to random
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

Biochar could offset the equivalent of up to three gigatons of carbon dioxide each year by 2050, like shutting down 800 coal plants.

“We can achieve negative emission in our agroecosystems by reducing the carbon source and enhancing carbon sinks. Contributing to both these aspects to create net negative agriculture.”

I'm a proponent of using grass clippings or biannual coppicing of willows so that the CO2 is recently taken out of our polluted atmosphere.

https://grist.org/agriculture/biochar-climate-technology-scale-up-pigs/

Casey, to Hydrogen
@Casey@newsie.social avatar
GreenFire, to random
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

Adding even a small amount of #biochar — a charcoal-like material produced by burning organic matter — to a dairy’s manure-composting process reduces methane emissions by 84%, a recent study by UC Merced researchers shows.

The dairy industry is one of the main sources of methane in California, making up 50% of the state’s methane emissions. Reducing these emissions is a critical part of state and federal efforts to address climate change.

https://news.ucmerced.edu/news/2022/research-reveals-easy-way-dairy-farmers-can-dramatically-reduce-their-climate-impact

GreenFire, to random
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

#ClimateProgress #ThanxBiden

Perhaps my second favorite form of Direct Carbon Dioxide capturing system to draw it's concentration down in our thin, precious atmosphere behind #BioChar will be building their first plant on the Gulf Coast.

The Project Cypress DAC Hub with ClimeWorks is expected to be sited in southwestern Louisiana and is designed to advance the commercialization of DAC+S to verifiably remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere based on renewable energy.
https://climeworks.com/news/battelle-climeworks-heirloom-receive-notification-of-selection-on-dac-hub-from-doe

GreenFire, to random
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

Exomad Green, a company committed to the vision of becoming the world's leading producer of sustainable Biochar. Their avowed mission is the conviction that Biochar can play a crucial role in creating a more sustainable future. They just began as the first #BioChar company in Bolivia and hope to significantly contribute to the development of a green economy and the agrotechnology industry in the region.

Other than that PR, I don't know anything about them, but still cool to see.

GreenFire, to CDR
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

I know that I have a steep hill to climb in order to help Carbon Dioxide Removal recover from the damage the and just plain grifters have done to the reputation of Direct Air Capture .

I'm hoping that the tangible product can help to convince people to reconsider DAC for CDR.

The demonstrated recalcitrance of terra preta and ability of any and every farmer/gardener to manufacture and sequester it makes it one of my favorite approaches.
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adh8499

GreenFire,
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

The economics of just carbon credits (~$1,500) wouldn't seem to justify pyrolysis equipment purchase like this, but if you can sell the biochar? Definitely makes it important to use the heat for something profitable more important too.

Let's see, about 6 metric tons of biochar from 100 cubic yards of wood chips could be sold for about 20 cents per kg according to WalMart. So that's about another thousand bucks or so.

About 200 hours to pyrolysize that 100 yds. Not going to get rich. #biochar

Casey, to Hydrogen
@Casey@newsie.social avatar
yubanet, to random
@yubanet@mastodon.social avatar

Research Explores Capacity of to Combat Climate Change, Improve Forest Soils. Researchers will conduct tests in the Six Rivers National Forest, treating each test site with a unique biochar mix that’s seeded with a native, pollinator-friendly plant mix to compare growth between test sites. https://yubanet.com/enviro/research-explores-capacity-of-biochar-to-combat-climate-change-improve-forest-soils/

siin, to climate
@siin@pagan.plus avatar

Some things just don't biodegrade well here, and part of it is that we're still perfecting our composting workflow and making sure our heaps don't overdry and die in our arid environment. We're getting better all the time, and it's a learning process. But in the meantime, I've been doing a lot of research on biochar. Most of the USDA fact sheets only talk about using biochar from wood or agricultural "wastes" like cornstalks, straw, etc. However, I know for a fact that in much of South America it's common to burn animal bones, manure, and more.

So, talk to me about biochar! Do you use it? What do you burn? What have your results been? Do you combine it with other soil remediation tactics (compost, compost teas, etc.)?

exador23,
@exador23@m.ai6yr.org avatar

@siin Don't have much direct experience with , but my friend Michael Whitman of BlueSkyBiochar does.

Biochar needs to be inoculated before you add it to the soil or it will suck nutrients out of the soil and into the char instead of the other way around.

So he says a really effective way to use your char is to add a layer on top of your compost pile whenever it's added to. This has the added benefit of capturing the methane and other gases produced by the composting process. And while the pile is cooking, nutrients are getting established inside the char.

He shows his biochar and compost starting around the 8 minute mark here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5JchWl6hvkk

KeithDJohnson, to permaculture
@KeithDJohnson@sfba.social avatar

The Conference for
Industry Building
The 2024 North American Biochar Conference is four days of valuable insights into the latest research findings, best practices, and emerging trends in biochar production, characterization, and application.
https://www.biocharconference.com/

GreenFire, to CDR
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

What is #CDR, carbon dioxide removal?

Carbon removal is the process of physically drawing down carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and durably storing it. According to the IPCC, carbon removal is more than capturing CO2 from the atmosphere.

It’s also about: “durably storing it in geological, terrestrial, ocean reservoirs, or in products.”

Pyrolysis of annual plant material biomass into #BioChar can amend our depleted soils and bring our thin, precious atmosphere's [CO2] back down.

GreenFire, to CDR
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

Roads2Removal.org is a collaborative public outreach initiative from Climate Now and the Livermore Lab Foundation trying to help us to save our planet by scaling up our drawdown of carbon dioxide out of our atmosphere.

As with the development of any new industry, the economics of the efforts strongly impacts the rate of growth.
https://roads2removal.org/purpose/

GreenFire, to random
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

This graph of falling prices for batteries is all the reason anyone should need to justify making the decision to pause building new LNG export terminals.

Renewable energy and storage can replace all of our fossil fuel use for electricity production, heating, and industry.

GreenFire,
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

This isn't a novice-level entry into the world of biochar and its potential role in helping to reverse the global warming we've caused and the two presentations are quite bland by most modern standards, but I really like this graphic that Nikolas Hagermann shared to help explain pyrolysis.
https://youtu.be/WHIVyx9-HlY?si=rKcazC7ZgMiMpKQX

I also quite liked that he showed the snowboard built using biochar that won a medal for its rider

#ClimateSolutions #ClimateProgress #Biochar #CDR #DAC #CarbonOffsets #CarbonOffsets

GreenFire, to CDR
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

So, I'm quite resigned to not being able to entirely restore the reputation of carbon offsets using carbon dioxide with everyone and I entirely appreciate the damage that has been done to this budding new part of the circular economy we need to transition into.

@jgkoomey @matthewtoad43 since y'all have been some of the fiercest opponents to this new industry, I'm curious what you think of this American University's group rebranding.

Minute 44 especially
https://youtu.be/yvth2iU2dHA?si=xgoT5B3INysDzboc

GreenFire,
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

I'll discuss more about their rebranding (I hate how corporate that sounds) from Carbon Removal Policy and Law Institute into the Institute for Responsible Carbon Removal later in this thread, but I want to post the link to this new program to promote this circular economy down under that I also just discovered last night right away as this seems like an excellent potential paradigm shift (even if only centimeters shifting Overton Window).


https://youtu.be/KM9-YFwItE4?si=4LZ9eh3Ng2OW0Esy

GreenFire,
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

To me biochar is one of the most promising Direct Air Capture Carbon Dioxide Removal technologies because it is so accessible to the most people to take part in especially all of the farmers that we need to recruit into the struggle to transition away from fossil fuels and to minimize greenhouse gas emissions.

So, I am intrigued to see how this rebranding will go for this ivory tower think tank.
https://www.american.edu/sis/centers/carbon-removal/upload/agenda-for-a-progressive-political-economy-of-carbon-removal.pdf

Binder, to random
@Binder@petrous.vislae.town avatar

TodayILearned about

IowaStateUniversity kids doing a preso on their research for Agriculture Cos

https://youtu.be/VvnnHIGP7h4?si=q-pK0e3EPKv6hKWB

Snoro, to conservative
@Snoro@mastodon.social avatar

Our plans to tackle climate change with carbon storage don't add up

Modelling that shows how the world can remain below 1.5°C of warming assumes we can store vast amounts of carbon dioxide underground, but a new analysis reveals that achieving this is extremely unlikely

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2427088-our-plans-to-tackle-climate-change-with-carbon-storage-dont-add-up/

GreenFire,
@GreenFire@mstdn.social avatar

@Snoro
Results show that biochar has negative emission potential of up to 0.92 billion tons of CO2 per year with an average net cost of US$90 per ton of CO2 in a sustainable manner, which could satisfy the negative emission demands in most mitigation scenarios compatible with China’s target of carbon neutrality.


https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-45314-y

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