Climatefarming in northern Senegal

Definition Climatefarming en francais

Definition Climate Farming

Climate farming uses agricultural means to keep carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gasses from escaping into the atmosphere. Like organic farming, climate farming maintains biodiversity and ecological balance on productive, argicultural land. But climate farmers like Hans-Peter Schmidt go a step further and covert leftover organic mass into biochar, a solid carbon compound that can improve soil quality. Biochar production also creates a kind of gas that can then be burned to help generate power. A climate farm could grow food, generate power, and help keep carbon out of the air.

Climatefarming – Pour une agriculture durable

von Hans-Peter Schmidt

Le climatefarming est souvent décrit comme une méthode agricole au moyen de laquelle du CO2 est prélevé de l’atmosphère et stocké de façon stable dans le sol sous forme de carbone. Ceci pourrait permettre de freiner le changement climatique. Mais le climatefarming, c’est également un concept écologique durable pour l’agriculture du future, qui produira aussi bien des denrées alimentaires que de l’énergie et de l’air propre, encouragera la biodiversité et protégera le paysage.

Au travers de leurs feuilles, les plantes prélèvent du dioxyde de carbone contenu dans l’air et le transforment à l’aide de la lumière, de substances minérales et de l’eau en molécules carboniques. Lorsque la plante meurt ou pourrit, ou si elle est mangée et digérée, les molécules longues de carbone sont de nouveau scindées. Ce processus libère de l’énergie et donc du carbone qui, composé à plus de 99% de CO2, s’évapore dans l’atmosphère. (en savoir plus ...)

Google News: deforestation

Climatefarmingprojekt Öfen für Afrika

Donnerstag, 12. Mai 2011

University of Florida News – UF researchers develop method to remove phosphate from water, using biochar

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University of Florida News – UF researchers develop method to remove phosphate from water, using biochar

UF researchers develop method to remove phosphate from water, using biochar

Filed under Environment, Florida, Research on Wednesday, May 11, 2011.

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Phosphate poses one of Florida’s ongoing water-quality challenges but a process developed by University of Florida researchers could provide an affordable solution, using partially burned organic matter called biochar to remove the mineral.

The process also yields methane gas usable as fuel and phosphate-laden carbon suitable for enriching soil, according to Bin Gao and Pratap Pullammanappallil, assistant professors in UF’s agricultural and biological engineering department, part of the Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. Crop wastes would provide raw material for the biochar.

A laboratory study demonstrating the effectiveness of biochar for phosphate removal appears in the current issue of the journal Bioresource Technology.

The study involved beet tailings, which are culled beets, scraps and weeds removed from shipments of sugar beets destined for processing to make sugar, said Gao, one of the authors. In the U.S., sugar beets are grown primarily in the Northeast and upper Midwest, but the technology can be adapted to other materials, he said.

“It’s really sustainable,” Gao said. “We will see if it can be commercialized.”

UF has filed a patent application for the phosphate-removal process, Gao said. Wastewater treatment facility representatives have shown interest in the technology, he said.

Phosphate is used to make fertilizers, pesticides and detergents. Florida produces about one-fourth of the world’s phosphate.

Florida’s surface waters sometimes contain large amounts of phosphate, arising from natural sources or human activity. Because the chemical can spur algae growth, it has caused water-quality concerns in some communities.

Some water treatment plants filter phosphate from wastewater but existing methods have drawbacks, including high cost, low efficiency and hazardous byproducts.

In the study, researchers started by collecting solid residues left after beet tailings were fermented in a device called an anaerobic digester, which yields methane gas. The material was baked at about 1,100 degrees Fahrenheit to make biochar.

The biochar was added to a water-and-phosphate solution and mixed for 24 hours. It removed about three-fourths of the phosphate, much better results than researchers obtained with other compounds, including commercial water-treatment materials. The phosphate-laden biochar can be applied directly to soils as a slow-release fertilizer.

The research team plans to investigate whether biochar could remove nitrogen from wastewater. Nitrogen can stimulate algae growth in surface water.

The research team has also been testing the potential for biochar to purify water of heavy metals including lead and copper, he said. Part of the challenge involves pinpointing raw materials with the greatest affinity for a particular contaminant. And used biochar packed with toxic metals would have to be regenerated or handled as hazardous waste.

Previous UF studies have demonstrated the potential value of producing methane gas by fermenting crop waste. Pullammanappallil specializes in this area and regularly collaborates with Gao on biochar studies.

Perhaps the biggest challenge researchers face is making biomass technology more cost-effective. Pullammanappallil recently helped design, build and operate an anaerobic digester at an American Crystal Sugar Company facility in Moorhead, Minn.

The digester processed beet tailings like those used in the study, and worked well, said Dave Malmskog, the company’s business development director at Moorhead. But when the research grant funding the project ended, the company found it wasn’t practical to continue.

Nonetheless, the researchers remain optimistic that the process can be made cost-effective.

“Florida agricultural industries could benefit,” Pullammanappallil said. “You could do this with any biomass — sugarcane bagasse, citrus pulp.”

Terra Preta Forum • Thema anzeigen - 5. TriaTerra-Blog Terra Preta Güllebehandlung

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Terra Preta Forum • Thema anzeigen - 5. TriaTerra-Blog Terra Preta Güllebehandlung

Terra Preta Güllebehandlung

http://www.triaterra.de/WebRoot/Store19 ... Rezept.pdf
Bilder und Beispiele ganz unten

Wie man mit Kompost- oder Misthaufen Terra Preta herstellt ist inzwischen bekannt (5-10V% Holzkohle +1-3V% Gesteinsmehl/Bentonit/Zeolith + EM)!
Aber was ist mit der Gülle, die bei vielen Landwirtschaftsbetrieben überwiegt?

Die Gülleproblematik ist Furcht erregend, wird aber von vielen Beratern, Instituten und Landwirten noch ignoriert. Unsere Nase ist das beste Labor für schädliche mikrobiologische Prozesse und Giftstoffe. Und Gülle stinkt! Fäulnis hat unsere Güllen fest im Griff. Dabei gehen Nährstoffe verloren (tausende Euro Wert an N in jedem Güllebehälter) und es entstehen potente Giftstoffe (Ammoniak, Schwefelverbindungen usw.). Krankheitskeime wie Clostridien (Botulismus) und Salmonellen vermehren sich in solchen Milieus und werden dominant. Die Botulismusseuche, die viele Landwirte in Schleswig-Holstein und anderswo quält, hat genau in der stinkenden Gülle seine Ursache.

Die Mikrobiologie in Güllen zu steuern und Fäulnis zu vermeiden ist schwieriger als bei Kompost oder Mist. Zu viel Wasser, zu viel Stickstoff (N), zu wenig Kohlenstoff (C). Die einfache moderne Zusammenmischung von Urin und Scheiße rächt sich. Eine Belastung mit Antibiotika, Desinfektionsmitteln und Klauenbehandlungsmitteln stört die Mikrobiologie zusätzlich.
Aber genau da liegen die Stärken von EM, Holzkohle und Gesteinsmehl/Bentonit/Zeolith.
*Milchsaure Fermentation statt Fäulnis im anaeroben Bereich (EM)
*Abbau von Giftstoffen (EM)
*Bindung von Stickstoff und Hemmstoffen (Holzkohle + Gesteinsmehl/Bentonit/Zeolith).

Güllebehandlung mit EM und Gesteinsmehl/Bentonit/Zeolith sind seit langem praktisch bewährt und erfolgreich. Was liegt näher als diese Erfahrung um Holzkohle zu erweitern und damit dauerhafte Terra Preta-Keime in die Böden zu bringen.
Ausgehend von der organischen Trockenmasse der Gülle habe ich dieses Terra Preta-Gülle-Rezept entworfen.
http://www.triaterra.de/WebRoot/Store19 ... Rezept.pdf
Für 2,50€ je Kubikmeter können wir eine geruchlose Gülle schaffen, die als Terra Preta-Initial wirkt. Alleine der geringere Stickstoffverlust und die bessere Pflanzenverträglichkeit bezahlt die Kosten. Die dabei entstehende Terra Preta, die mikrobiologische Stabilisierung der Betriebe, das problemlose Überstehen der typischen Frühjahrstrockenheit und pilzresistente Pflanzen sind nur der Bonus.

Wer Fragen hat ruft an.

Schönen Gruß Marko Heckel
www.triaterra.de

Biochar, terrapreta - Google News

soil carbon or biochar - Google News

"Biochartechnologies" via Joerg