4.7 Article

Techno-economic analysis reveals the untapped potential of wood biochar

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 291, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.133000

Keywords

Wood biochar; Circular economy; Nutrient recovery; Bioeconomy; Soil water retention; Bark beetle

Funding

  1. Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic [QK1910056]

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Infested wood can be processed into wood biochar via mobile pyrolysis units, which is a good option for fire prevention and has advantages in increasing plant-available water content in soil and recycling nutrients. Wood biochar can promote soil microbial communities and has positive effects on soil fertility. With increasing damage to forest cover due to climate change, wood biochar represents untapped potential in soil, nutrient, and energy management.
The United Nations estimates the rate of deforestation over 10 million hectares per year, with additional infested wood available due to drought, bark beetle calamity and other damage vectors. Processing the hard-to-reach infested wood into biochar via mobile pyrolysis units seems to be a good option for fire prevention. However, since most biochar is currently produced mainly from biological waste, there is not enough experience with wood biochar on a large scale. Review of current knowledge, followed by techno-economic assessment reveals that following the chemical composition of the feedstock, wood biochar outperforms other types of biochar in terms of high porosity. Therefore, wood biochar shows excellent results in increasing the amount of plant-available water content in soil and appears to be an excellent tool for recycling nutrients (especially into plant available forms of phosphorus and nitrogen). The overall positive effects of biochar application change from abiotic to biotic over time because as it decays, many of its physical properties disappear, but it can boost soil microbial communities on which soil fertility depends. As global climate change creates a wide range of factors that damage forest cover, wood biochar consequently represents untapped potential in the field of soil, nutrient, and energy management.

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