Bio-energy in the black
New York State College of Agriculture & Life Sciences · Cornell University
Abstract
At best, common renewable energy strategies can only offset fossil fuel emissions of CO2 – they cannot reverse climate change. One promising approach to lowering CO2 in the atmosphere while producing energy is biochar bio-energy, based on low-temperature pyrolysis. This technology relies on capturing the off-gases from thermal decomposition of wood or grasses to produce heat, electricity, or biofuels. Biochar is a major by-product of this pyrolysis, and has remarkable environmental properties. In soil, biochar was shown to persist longer and to retain cations better than other forms of soil organic matter. The precise half-life of biochar is still disputed, however, and this will have important implications…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.43
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Biochar
- Pyrolysis
- Environmental science
- Fossil fuel
- Slash-and-char
- Renewable energy
- Biofuel
- Carbon sequestration