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CA Topic

Biochar

Brief Context

In News India’s carbon market is expected to rely on CO₂ removal technologies like biochar, which will play a key role in meeting climate goals and offsetting emissions. Biochar It is black carbon produced from biomass sources [i.e., wood chips, plant residues, manure or other agricultural waste products] for the purpose of transforming the biomass carbon into a more stable form (carbon sequestration). It offers a sustainable alternative to manage waste and capture carbon.

Source Content

Syllabus :GS3/Environment 

In News

  • India’s carbon market is expected to rely on CO₂ removal technologies like biochar, which will play a key role in meeting climate goals and offsetting emissions.

Biochar

  • It is black carbon produced from biomass sources [i.e., wood chips, plant residues, manure or other agricultural waste products] for the purpose of transforming the biomass carbon into a more stable form (carbon sequestration).
  • It offers a sustainable alternative to manage waste and capture carbon.

Status in India

  • India generates vast amounts of agricultural and municipal waste, much of which is burned or dumped, causing pollution. 
  • Utilizing 30–50% of this surplus to produce biochar could remove 0.1 gigatonnes of CO₂ annually. 
  • Byproducts like syngas and bio-oil could generate 8–13 TWh of electricity and offset up to 8% of diesel/kerosene use, reducing coal demand and cutting over 2% of India’s fossil fuel emissions.

Significance 

  • Biochar is a durable carbon sink that can store carbon in soil for 100–1,000 years and offers scalable emission reduction across sectors. 
  • In agriculture, it improves water retention and can cut nitrous oxide emissions by 30–50%.
  •  It also restores soil health by enhancing organic carbon. 
  • Modified biochar can capture CO₂ from industrial emissions, though less efficiently than other methods.
  • In construction, adding 2–5% biochar to concrete boosts strength, heat resistance, and sequesters 115 kg CO₂/m³.
  • In wastewater treatment, biochar can treat 200–500 litres per kg, with a potential demand of 2.5–6.3 million tonnes in India.

What hinders biochar’s application?

  • Despite its high carbon removal potential, biochar remains underutilised in carbon credit systems due to lack of standardised feedstock markets, inconsistent carbon accounting, and weak investor confidence. 
  • Key barriers to large-scale adoption include limited resources, evolving technologies, policy gaps, and low stakeholder awareness.

Suggestions 

  • Biochar needs sustained R&D, integration into climate and agricultural policies, and recognition in the Indian carbon market.
    • This could generate income for farmers, create around 5.2 lakh rural jobs, and enhance soil health, crop yields, and fertilizer efficiency. 
  • Biochar offers a promising, science-backed solution for India’s climate and development goals.

Source: TH