We can just show him the fine work thats been done here in Massachusetts.

It has made the state infamous.

Ray
 


-----Original Message-----
From: "David Yarrow" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, 8 Apr 2009 11:43:50 -0400
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Fw: Dr. Hansen and associates, please fully disavow 
industrial biochar


well, well, steve does reveal his strategy.  straw man data tossed n the air 
and ignite to startle and confuse the simple minded.
 
should we force him to work on fire lines in the western forests this year?  
send us photos from the front lines?
 
andalso photos of all the great forestry that has been practiced for the 
last 200 years and slash & burn in america:
trees into timber, potash and charcoal.
officially sanctioned wholesale, discount, bulk-buy destruction of forests.
rotational grazing of centuries old sylvan ecosystems.
by corporate conglomerates.
 
the real villan isn't acid rain or insect pests,
it's naked, blunt force greed.
 
i'm ranting.
but it feels good to lt it loose
once in a while.
 
----- Original Message ----- 
From: Steven Springer 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Wednesday, April 08, 2009 9:22 AM
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Fw: Dr. Hansen and associates, please fully disavow 
industrial biochar


Carolyn,
 
I do have an open mind, but I try to be careful that my brains don’t fall 
out while considering the evidence presented to prove this conclusion!  If 
you are so easily convinced, then perhaps you might be interested in an 
investment opportunity for a product that is able to cure all ills.  Will 
you send me a check(!)? Don’t worry, I will supply you with all kinds of 
straw-man data that can be misleading, manipulated and sound important that 
to those who have no knowledge of such topics.  Are you interested?
 
Steve
 



From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Carolyn Summers
Sent: Tuesday, April 07, 2009 10:30 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Fw: Dr. Hansen and associates, please fully disavow 
industrial biochar
 
Obviously, you know that no one has been keeping temp data for the last 1000 
years, so, obviously, you are not prepared to be open-minded on this 
subject. For those of us who observe natural phenomena, the evidence is all 
around us. Worldwide.
--  
   Carolyn Summers
    63 Ferndale Drive 
    Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706
    914-478-5712






From: Steven Springer <[email protected]>
Reply-To: <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 3 Apr 2009 08:18:25 -0500
To: <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>, 
<[email protected]>
Conversation: [ENTS] Fw: Dr. Hansen and associates, please fully disavow 
industrial biochar
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Fw: Dr. Hansen and associates, please fully disavow 
industrial biochar

Interesting philosophy here, however, not all of us accept the premise of a 
world-wide climate change actually occurring! Give me a minimum of 1,000 
years of temperature data then come to me with an established pattern at 
averaged world-wide temperature increases, not 150 years worth.  Until then, 
this doctrine remains a hypothesis at best….
 
Steve Springer
Urban Forestry
City of Bartlett
 



From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of David Yarrow
Sent: Friday, April 03, 2009 8:08 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]; 
[email protected]
Subject: [ENTS] Fw: Dr. Hansen and associates, please fully disavow 
industrial biochar




----- Original Message ----- 

From: David Yarrow <mailto:[email protected]> 

To: danny day <mailto:[email protected]>  

Cc: alan page <mailto:[email protected]>  

Sent: Friday, April 03, 2009 8:29 AM

Subject: Re: Dr. Hansen and associates, please fully disavow industrial 
biochar



yes, there is serious transcontinental backlash underway against the idea of 
industrial biochar.  and with good reason, i think.  we have too many 
examples of doing a great idea stupid.  or, to rephrase in the specific 
context, industrial solutions won't solve our industrial-created troubles.  
a corollary idea is that truly wise thinkers are rare.  and too many people 
are single shot, silver bullet thinkers: we must make enough biochar to 
sequester enough carbon to offset all our emissions and fix global warming.



i've had disagreements with folks who believe making biochar from trees is 
our ideal way to implement a modern terra preta strategy, convinced that 
ancient indigenous amazon tribes cleared the forest and charcoaled the 
trees.  this is almost a reflex, since most people's idea of charcoal is 
hardwood char for cooking, and few have heard of making char from anything 
else.  and further, it's an american tradition: before coal mining became 
industrial scale, most eastern forests were cleared and burned in heaps to 
make potash and char for industry.



first of all, i doubt hardwood trees are our best source of biomass to char. 
 last year i had the chore to bust up char made from woody underbrush.  very 
hot, sweaty job that took quite a while.



on the other hand, last year we made char from softwood, corn stalks, weeds, 
leaves, straw, hay, horse manure, and weathered boards.  that stuff crumbles 
to powder in your hand -- and likely is more attractive habitat for 
microbes.  cleared forest land sprouts with vigorous, dense non-woody 
underbrush and weeds that can be easily cleared and charred every year.



second, any sensible shift to renewable energy begins with "reduce" -- 
energy & resource conservation.  25 years ago i coined the phrase "more is 
better, but less is best." buckminster fuller, who learned system design on 
board naval vessels said "do more with less."  we can't sustain our current 
extravagant consumption of energy no matter what energy source we exploit.  
this is not a technological issue -- it is a moral and ethical challenge.  
how much is enough?  our first response must be to consume less, share more 
and leave more for future generations.



third, early in geological evolution, micro-organisms in sea and soil 
generated the earth's atmosphere by their respiration, and maintain the 
composition of gases necessary for more advanced, complex life forms.  
microbes form the basal tissue of earth's lungs whose breathing in & out to 
sustain the atmosphere.   together with microbes, trees and forests evolved 
later as earth's secondary lung tissue to sustain the atmosphere to 
stabilize climate and moderate weather.  trees and microbes are also earth's 
primary engine to create new topsoil.



cutting forests to cure climate change is like surgical removal of lungs to 
fix respiratory disease -- like the poverbial cutting off your nose to spite 
your face.  the wise response is to regenerate our trees and forests to 
restore and strengthen this crucial respiratory function of the biosphere, 
not initiate a new cycle of deforestation and soil degradation.



however, that said, forests today are in catastrophic condition due to 
decades of bad, exploitative forestry practices.  left alone, forests will 
slowly regenerate, but in our onrushing global warming emergency, 
intelligent intervention can accelerate forest regeneration.  benign neglect 
is not an option.  at the least, selective cutting to remove chaotic 
undergrowth and excess sapling trees can upgrade forests while we generate 
significant streams of biomass for carbon negative energy and biochar, and 
create vast new job markets.  then we have functional forests plus energy, 
fertile soil and sustainable economic recovery.  such "timber stand 
improvement" is an excellent first step toward an intelligent practice of 
sustainable forest stewardship.



as an ancient forest advocate, the idea of degrading the complex biotic 
diversity of these sylvan communities into tree factories to chip up into 
biochar & bioenergy is unacceptable -- another example of "stuck on stupid." 
 so i share the outrage against plantation forestry to feed industrial 
biochar production.  i believe we can have both mature forests and biochar & 
bioenergy production in a sensible, balanced strategy.  



toward this urgent possibility, i plan to develop a broader definition of 
"carbon negative" to embrace ancient forests and conservation grasslands as 
well as biochar strategy.  so, i started www.ancientforests.us 
<http://www.ancientforests.us>  and at our fall biochar symposium i hope to 
have a speaker outline an intelligent strategy for forest stewardship that 
includes soil restoration with biochar, rock dust, sea minerals and 
inoculants.  the current trouble is i don't know anyone who can advocate 
such and approach, but i just rejoined ENTS (eastern native tree society: 
www.nativetreesociety.org <http://www.nativetreesociety.org> ) and initiated 
an email inquiry with alan page.  i hope by the november symposium we will 
have something solid to say about how to effect a successful carbon negative 
marriage of forest stewardship with biochar & bioenergy extraction.



given all else i am doing, this seems unrealistically ambitious.  but 
perhaps if i think and meditate and write a bit on this, others will appear 
to carry this idea into fuller expression and action. i can only do my best 
to advocate and advance this line of thought. and pray.



for a green & peaceful planet,
David Yarrow
Turtle EyeLand Sanctuary
44 Gilligan Rd, East Greenbush, NY 12061
cell: 518-881-6632
www.carbon-negative.us <http://www.carbon-negative.us> 
www.ancientforests.us <http://www.ancientforests.us> 
www.nutrient-dense.info <http://www.nutrient-dense.info> 
www.OnondagaVesica.info <http://www.OnondagaVesica.info> 
www.OnondagaLakePeaceFestival.org <http://www.OnondagaLakePeaceFestival.org> 

www.farmandfood.org <http://www.farmandfood.org> 
www.SeaAgri.com <http://www.SeaAgri.com> 
www.TurtleEyeland.org <http://www.TurtleEyeland.org> 
www.dyarrow.org <http://www.dyarrow.org> 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: danny day <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: David Yarrow <mailto:[email protected]> 

Sent: Thursday, April 02, 2009 9:52 PM

Subject: Fwd: Dr. Hansen and associates, please fully disavow industrial 
biochar


I have gotten 200 of these emails being distributed by someone who thinks 
biochar totals equal the amounts of sequestion.   


Danny Day, President, EPRIDA

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Enni Seuri <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Apr 2, 2009 at 1:59 PM
Subject: Dr. Hansen and associates, please fully disavow industrial biochar

Dear Dr. Hansen,

I am writing to request that you disavow your public
support for industrial biochar as a geoengineering solution
to climate change. It is critical that quick techno-fixes
not be used as an excuse to delay emission cuts from coal
and land degradation, and other required personal
sacrifices and social changes. Given that your statements
and scientific studies have been eagerly used by biochar
industry boosters, it is important that you clearly state
you do NOT support biochar production from increased
industrial plantation agriculture.

In your paper "Target atmospheric CO2: Where should
humanity aim?" you did not make fairly simple straight
forward estimates of the amount of land and biomass waste
required to provide for your illustrative biochar proposal.
I note that neither in the paper nor in the appendix do you
produce an estimate for the amount of plant material
required to achieve your proposed carbon "drawdown of ~8
ppm or more in half a century", or seek to determine how
much of this could reasonably be expected to be provided by
agricultural or forestry wastes, and how much would by
necessity come from industrial tree plantations.

This omission is a serious oversight that has facilitated
significant misappropriation of your name to promote
industrial biochar, and thus may lead to significant
ecological harm. Estimates provided elsewhere suggest that
your biochar proposal would require waste products
equivalent to annual dedicated biomass production across 80
million hectares. Do such quantities of available waste
exist? And how much of it is genuinely waste, and not
earmarked for composting, soil fertilization, animal
bedding, cooking fuel and other ecologically and socially
important existing uses of biomass residues?

In response to earlier questioning, you have replied that
"Broadly speaking, our climate change mitigation scenarios
are strictly illustrative in nature." This comes from the
climate scientist upon whose every word much of the world
awaits with baited breath. You did not need to "assert or
imply plantations should be grown specifically for biochar,
or that reforestation should be at the expense of food
crops, pristine ecosystems or substantially inhabited
land." Your own facts and figures, when examined, do so for
you.

It will be virtually impossible to industrially use biomass
waste for biochar while eliminating its production from
further intensification of agriculture, deforestation, and
otherwise increasing the industrial burden upon terrestrial
ecosystems, particularly if biochar is accepted for
inclusion in carbon markets.

Further, this protest urges you to more fully examine and
promote protection of old forests. Ending primary forest
destruction and promoting restoration of old growth forests
would appear to be second only to ending coal as a climate
change mitigation strategy. Why are you so outspoken on
coal but not on sufficient terrestrial ecological issues
regarding climate change?

Given recent science that indicates that 25% of the Earth's
land surface is being degraded (not 15% as previously
thought), it is professionally irresponsible to even hint
at geoengineering solutions that would require hundreds of
millions of additional industrial tree plantations to fully
implement. The path to ecological sustainability is not
further geoengineering technofixes, but rather an end to
human cutting and burning, and a return to sustainable
living based upon steady state use of natural capital.

Sir, have you proposed a biochar target which cannot be met
by the means you propose? Is so, please remedy the
situation. As you have said before to others, I and many
others encourage you to keep your eye upon the ball, and
work to dramatically reduce emissions from both coal AND
land degradation -- the two keystone responses to
threatened abrupt and runaway climate change.

Whether you intended to or not, your "illustrative" example
of biochar has been seized upon by others to support a
massive geoengineering of the Earth's land mass to produce
biochar. Given this situation, and lack of general public
understanding of scientific nuance, you have a
responsibility to publicly disavow industrial biochar on
the industrial scale being proposed. We expect you to do so
immediately.

Sincerely,

Enni Seuri
Finland
[email protected]


cc:
Pushker Kharecha, Chris Goodall, Johannes Lehmann, Stephen
Joseph, BEST Energies, Danny Day/EPRIDA, Jim
Fournier/BioChar Engineering, UNFCCC Secretariat, Open
Atmospheric Science Journal











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