Writing in the journal Nature, a Cornell biogeochemist describes an economical and efficient way to help offset global warming: Pull carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere by charring, or partially burning, trees, grasses or crop residues without the use of oxygen.Less expensive than ethanol production, this could reportedly offset some ten percent of our annual fossil fuel emissions!
When bioenergy is produced by pyrolysis (low-temperature burning without oxygen), it produces biochar, which has twice as much carbon in its residue than that from other sources. This makes bioenergy carbon-negative and improves soil health.
This process, he writes, would double the carbon concentration in the residue, which could be returned to the soil as a carbon sink. The exhaust gases from this process and other biofuel production could then be converted into energy.
Sunday, May 13, 2007
Interesting Idea On Global Warming
Science Daily:
Labels:
Bioenergy,
Climate Change,
Global Warming
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