The Biochar Debate: Charcoal's Potential to Reverse Climate Change and Build Soil Fertiility - Couverture souple

Livre 14 sur 17: Schumacher Briefings

Bruges, James

 
9781603582551: The Biochar Debate: Charcoal's Potential to Reverse Climate Change and Build Soil Fertiility

Synopsis

Book by Bruges James

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Revue de presse

Biochar is a relatively new word in the green lexicon, but one you ll hear more about going forward. It isn t a silver bullet, but it may be a useful help in the climate challenge this slim book will let you think knowledgeably about it, and start to act in your own backyard. --Bill McKibben, author of Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet

A brilliant, readable review on the critical need to restore our degraded lands back to fertility be it to sequester greenhouse gases naturally, support forests, improve soil moisture or increase crop yields. Bruges outlines how supporting natural terrestrial sequestration is the cost-effective, proven practice to extract carbon from the atmosphere, and that this can be augmented via the use of soil amendments such as biochar. He concludes with examples that elucidate why tying biochar-based land-management solutions to one-size-fits-all market incentives risks time, money and public health. Our students say, It s a 101 must read a strong recommendation, indeed. --Alison Burchell, Geologist, Natural Terrestrial Solutions Group

The buzz of interest and activity around biochar in recent years is accelerating. In this concise but engaging book, James Bruges gets us up to speed with the ecology, economics and politics of biochar. Over three decades of speaking about and teaching permaculture, I have come across very few sustainable technologies that appear to change the rules about how to work with nature. Biochar is one of those few. Could biochar be the simple solution by which we can save civilisation from the twin crises of resource depletion and climate catastrophe? This sounds like an absurd claim, but not one that can be easily dismissed. James Bruges steers a course between the hope and the hype. --David Holmgren, co-originator of the Permaculture concept and author of Future Scenarios

Présentation de l'éditeur

Charcoal-making is one of the oldest industrial technologies, and in the last decade there has been a growing wave of excitement about its potential for combating climate change. This is because burying biochar (fine-grained charcoal) is a highly effective way to extract carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. In addition it can increase the yield of food crops and the ability of soil to retain moisture. Some people are concerned that awarding carbon credits for biochar could have seriously damaging outcomes. The Biochar Debate agrees, but describes an alternative approach, called the Carbon Maintenance Fund (CMF), that avoids the dangers. This would give every government the incentive to enable businesses, farmers and individuals to increase their country s carbon pool. It is based on remote sensing by satellite, a tried and tested technology, and would be applied globally each year to measure the increase or decrease of carbon in plants, soil and roots. 'The Biochar Debate' sets out experimental and scientific aspects of biochar in the context of global warming, the global economy and negotiations for the future of the Kyoto Protocol. It concludes by encouraging all gardeners and farmers to use biochar to help prevent climate change.

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Autres éditions populaires du même titre

9781900322676: The Biochar Debate: Charcoal's Potential to Reverse Climate Change and Build Soil Fertility

Edition présentée

ISBN 10 :  1900322676 ISBN 13 :  9781900322676
Editeur : Green Books, 2009
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