
Biochar Could Help Boost Yields, Improve Soil Health
by Kevin Laird Sooke News Mirror, British Columbia, Canada - July 11th, 2024
Looking for a way to increase yields without breaking the bank?

Trent Roberts, left, professor at the University of Arkansas, and Dustin Bolton, a rice, cotton, soybean, wheat and milo farmer from Arkansas, were speakers at the National Conservation Systems Cotton and Rice Conference. Forrest Laws.Forrest Laws
Who isn’t. Biochar, a carbon-rich byproduct of burning vegetation, may be an answer – if all the stars line up, and it becomes more commercially viable.
Studies have shown applying biochar as a soil amendment can increase yields in crops like corn, according to Trent Roberts, professor and soil fertility specialist with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.


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By Mark Segal for ESG Today, January 16th, 2025

Google announced that is has signed the largest-ever biochar-based carbon removal agreements, with two new 100,000 tonne deals to buy carbon removal credits from India-based Varaha and California-based Charm Industrial, for a total of 200,000 tonnes by 2030
Biochar, or biological charcoal, is produced by heating biomass, such as forest residue, wood or crop waste, in the absence of oxygen, creating a stable form of carbon, which when buried in soil enables centuries-long carbon sequestration, in addition to leading to improved soil fertility.
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