Abstract

AbstractBiochar has been proposed as a promising negative CO2 emission technology to mitigate future climate change with the additional benefit of increasing agricultural production. However, the spatial responses of soil organic carbon (SOC) to biochar addition in cropland are still uncertain, and the economic feasibility of large‐scale biochar implementation remains unclear. Here, we analyzed the response of SOC to biochar addition using 389 paired field measurements. The results show that biochar addition significantly increased SOC by 45.8% on average with large regional variations. Using a random forest model trained with soil, climate, biotic, biochar, and management factors, we found that the response of SOC to biochar addition was mainly dependent on biochar application rates, initial SOC, edaphic (e.g., pH), and climatic (e.g., mean annual precipitation) variables. Combined with the predicted SOC changes to biochar addition on the global cropland, we assessed the revenue of the biochar system based on the current and potential pyrolysis plants in the world using the life‐cycle analysis. Net revenue of the currently existing 144 pyrolysis plants increases with larger plant capacity and higher carbon price. Potential revenue of building new plants is high in regions like America and Europe but low in regions with infertile soil, low crop residues availability, and inconvenient transportation. The global CO2 removal of biochar application is 6.6 Tg CO2e (CO2 equivalent) year−1 with a net revenue of $ 177 million dollars at a carbon price of $ 50 t−1 CO2 for current pyrolysis plants with a biomass‐processing capacity of 20,000 t year−1. Our study provides a full economic assessment of idealized biochar addition scenarios and identifies the locations with maximal potential revenues with new pyrolysis plants.

Highlights

  • To meet the Paris Agreement's goal of limiting global warming to below 2°C, negative emission technologies will be required (Minx et al, 2018; Smith, 2016; UNFCCC, 2015), such as increasing soil carbon storage with the help of biochar

  • We conducted a literature search in the Web of Science and China Knowl­ edge Resource Integrated (CNKI) databases with the keywords of “soil organic carbon” or “SOC” and “biochar.” Publications were selected using the following criteria: (1) Biochar addition experiment must be conducted in the field cropland with explicit locations; (2) at least one pair of SOC data is available

  • Since our datasets used for random forest (RF) model training is experimental dependence, we considered the effects of sites index on SOC response ratio (RR) with biochar addition using the site name as a categorical variable for model training and predictions and found no improvement

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

To meet the Paris Agreement's goal of limiting global warming to below 2°C, negative emission technologies will be required (Minx et al, 2018; Smith, 2016; UNFCCC, 2015), such as increasing soil carbon storage with the help of biochar. Bai et al (2019) compared the effects of biochar on SOC sequestration with other climate-­smart agriculture management practices such as conservation tillage and cover crop and found that SOC content was increased by 28% (95% CI = 23–­32) with field biochar application (96.7% sites

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
| CONCLUSION
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