Charcoal making in the Brazilian Amazon: Economic aspects of production and carbon conversion efficiencies of kilns

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Abstract

Charcoal production worldwide is increasing for energy use in households and industry, but it is often regarded as an unsustainable practice and is linked to agricultural frontiers (Prado 2000). The production (Coomes and Burt 1999) and use of charcoal in agriculture is common in Brazil and widespread in Asia (Steiner et al. 2004). The efficiency of biomass conversion into charcoal becomes important in conjunction with a newly proposed opportunity to use charcoal as a soil conditioner that improves soil quality on very acid and highly weathered soils (Lehmann et al. 2002; Steiner et al. 2004). This can be realized either by charring the entire above-ground woody biomass in a shifting cultivation system as an alternative to slash-and-burn (coined recently as slash-and-char by (Glaser et al. 2002; Lehmann et al. 2002) or by utilizing crop residues in permanent cropping systems. Charcoal formation during biomass burning is considered one of the few ways that C is transferred to refractory long-term pools (Glaser et al. 2001a; Kuhlbusch and Crutzen 1995; Skjemstad 2001). Producing charcoal for soil amelioration instead of burning biomass would result in increased refractory soil organic matter, greater soil fertility and a sink of CO2 if re-growing vegetation (secondary forest) is used. A farmer practicing slash and char could profit from soil fertility improvement and C credits (if provided by a C trade mechanism to mitigate climate change), providing a strong incentive to avoid deforestation of remaining primary tropical forests. © Springer Science + Business Media B.V. 2009.

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Swami, S. N., Steiner, C., Teixeira, W. G., & Lehmann, J. (2009). Charcoal making in the Brazilian Amazon: Economic aspects of production and carbon conversion efficiencies of kilns. In Amazonian Dark Earths: Wim Sombroek’s Vision (pp. 411–422). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9031-8_23

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