Covering the earth with charcoal? - There was a big debate about biochar in last week’s Guardian, between George Monbiot, who thinks it’s being sold as a “miracle mass fuel cure“, and defenders of biochar, including James Lovelock, who agrees that “it would be wrong to plant anything specifically to make charcoal” but that biochar has net benefits if it’s made from agricultural wastes. Monbiot says what’s being proposed amounts to “turning the planet’s surface into charcoal”. But is it really? I calculated just how much biochar would really be needed to store all the excess carbon dioxide in the atmosphere…
Not a great deal, if you think about it. But in reality we aren’t talking about the whole earth’s surface, but only about the arable land, because that’s (a) where most of the crop wastes are, (b) where the people are to do the charring, (c) where people are interested in improving the soil, and (d) they are totally man-made ecosystems anyway, so if we need to modify land on a planetary scale, that’s the place to start. The Earth’s surface area is 51 gigahectares (nice unit!) of which 1.36 gHa are arable (by George M’s figure) - that’s 2.7% of the total. So: If all the “excess” carbon dioxide in the atmosphere were converted into carbon and spread across all the earth’s arable lands, there would be 17kg of charcoal per square metre, in a layer 8cm thick. That’s not an unfeasible notion. The Gardening with Biochar FAQ mentions biochar application rates of around 5kg/m2. On the other hand, photos of Terra Preta soils show black layers that are many centimetres thick, so they must contain far more than 17 kg/m2 of carbon. Original blog post

Luonto on kuollut. Kaikkialla on pelkkää tyhjyyttä kolmannen maailmansodan jälkeen, joka on käyty veden omistuksesta 35 vuotta sitten. Maitu Councilin sisätiloissa elävän yhteisön museokuraattorina toimiva Asha saa yllättäen paketin multaa postista ja istuttaa siihen vanhan siemenen, joka alkaa heti itää. Asha pyytää lupaa tutkia elämän mahdollisuutta ulkomaailmassa, mutta Council ei myönnä hänelle viisumia. Asha murtautuu ulos yhteisöstä autioon ulkomaailmaan päästäkseen istuttamaan orastavan taimen. Onko ulkomaailmassa sittenkin elämää? Kenialaisen ohjaajan Wanuri Kahiun scifi-lyhytelokuva valittiin Sundance Film Festivalin ohjelmistoon 2010.
Nature is extinct. The outside is dead, 35 years after World War III - “The Water War”. Asha lives and works as a museum curator in one of the indoor communities set up by the Maitu Council. When she receives a box in the mail containing soil, she plants an old seed in it and the seed starts to germinate instantly. Asha appeals to the Council to grant her permission to investigate the possibility of life on the outside but the Council denies her exit visa. Asha breaks out of the inside community to go into the dead and derelict outside to plant the growing seedling and possibly find life on the outside.
Official Selection, Sundance Film Festival 2010
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