Folks,

The question about whether biochar is a CDR technique and therefore
"geoengineering" raises some interesting issues.

Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) techniques involves to processes that are in
principle separable:

1. Carbon dioxide removal from the atmosphere (or oceans)
2. Storage of that carbon in a long-lived pool.

Carbon can be removed from the atmosphere using biological strategies
(e.g., land plants, phytoplankton) or chemical strategies (e.g., direct air
capture, accelerated chemical weathering).

Carbon so removed must then be stored in a long-lived reservoir. Carbon can
be stored in a reduced form (e.g., biochar, living forests) or in an
oxidized form (e.g., CO2 injected in geologic reservoirs, Fe-fertilized
biomass that has oxided into dissolved inorganic carbon in the deep ocean).

Carbon stored in an oxidized form can be largely in the form of molecular
CO2 (perhaps dissolved) or can be part of another compound such as CaCO3
(perhaps dissolved).

What makes something CDR approach is a system property (i.e., air capture
that vents back to the atmosphere is not a CDR approach; geologic CO2
storage without air capture is not a CDR approach; but put the two together
and you have a CDR approach).

On this taxonomy, I would consider biochar as a way of storing reduced
carbon for long periods of time. Under this interpretation, biochar could
be part of a CDR system, but as a process in-and-of-itself, biochar is an
approach for carbon storage. Biochar does no carbon dioxide removal, so
cannot itseld be a CDR technique.

Therefore, it may make sense to talk about biochar as a carbon dioxide
storage approach.  As part of a system of biological carbon capture by land
plants and storage using biochar, biochar can be part of a CDR system, but
biochar itself is not a CDR system.

Maybe we should be talking about CDRS (Carbon Dioxide Removal and Storage)
instead of CDR. We should then specifiy both the Carbon Dioxide Removal
(CDR) approach and the Storage (S) approach.

Biochar is an S approach, not a CDR approach.

Best,

Ken

_______________
Ken Caldeira

Carnegie Institution for Science
Dept of Global Ecology
260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
+1 650 704 7212 [email protected]
http://dge.stanford.edu/labs/caldeiralab
https://twitter.com/KenCaldeira

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