INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LATEST TECHNOLOGY IN ENGINEERING,
MANAGEMENT & APPLIED SCIENCE (IJLTEMAS)
ISSN 2278-2540 | DOI: 10.51583/IJLTEMAS | Volume XIII, Issue VII, July 2024
www.ijltemas.in Page 43
Bio-Char Used for Carbon Sequestration and to Balance the CO
2
Concentration in Atmosphere: A Review
Rakhman Sarwono
Research Centre for chemistry National Research and Innovation Agency, Komplek PUSPIPTEK Serpong, Tang-sel,
Banten (15314), Indonesia.
DOI : https://doi.org/10.51583/IJLTEMAS.2024.130706
Received: 10 July 2024; Accepted: 20 July 2024; Published: 29 July 2024
Abstract: The Carbon concentration in earth is closed system, therefore, the contain of carbon in each elements are different. The
concentration of CO
2
in atmosphere is lower compared with N
2
and O
2
gas but CO
2
concentration is great effect to the atmosphere
temperature, it may cause the global warming and climate change. The CO
2
concentration in atmosphere should be maintained to
slower increase in order to reduce the effect of CO
2
in atmosphere. Balancing of carbon positive and negative is concerned to
maintain the CO
2
concentration in atmosphere. Bio-chars are materials carbon that can be used as soil amendment to increase
crop production. Recently, the carbon positive more than the carbon negative, resulted the CO
2
concentration in atmosphere was
increased gradually. Biochar has been possibility to produce in a large quantity to utilize of waste biomass. We needs a large
quantity of biochar to be produced and mixed with soil and store in the ground as carbon sequestration, those biochar increase
the soil fertility. Scenarios stabilization wedge represents an activity that starts at zero reduction of emissions in 2005 and
increase linearly until it accounts for 1 GtC/ year or 1 wedges reduced carbon emissions in the year 2055.
Key words: CO
2
, positive, negative, balance. Biochar, stabilization
I. Introduction
Greenhouse gas such as CO
2
, CO, CH
4
, water and NOx are entered to the atmosphere might cause the global warming. Carbon
dioxide concentrations are rising mostly because of the fossil fuels that people are burning for energy. Fossil fuels like coal and
oil contain carbon that plants pulled out of the atmosphere through photosynthesis over many millions of years; we are returning
that carbon to the atmosphere in just a few hundred. Since the middle of the 20th century, annual emissions from burning fossil
fuels have increased every decade, from an average of 3 billion tons of carbon (11 billion tons of carbon dioxide) a year in the
1960s to 9.5 billion tons of carbon (35 tons of carbon dioxide) per year in the 2010s. The concentration of CO
2
in air has
increased from 270 ppm before industrial revolution to close to 405 ppm today.
1
Based on analysis from NOAA’s Global
Monitoring Lab, global average atmospheric carbon dioxide was 414.72 parts per million (ppm) in 2021
2
In May 2022 the
concentration CO
2
in atmosphere is 421 ppm.
3
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has forecast an increase
in global temperature 1.8
o
C by 2100, largely as a result of anthropogenic CO
2
emissions.
4
About half of these CO
2
emissions are
from distributed sources such as transportation and power plants.
5
Human have led to a massive increase in CO
2
emissions as a primary greenhouse gases that are contribution to climate change.
The emission of CO
2
, which is thought to contribute to global warming, is a byproduct of the combustion of fossil fuels. It will
increases in extreme weather and global temperatures, research is developing into CO
2
capture to help reverse climate change.
CO
2
is one of the main culprit molecules of global warming because of its ability to trap energy from infrared (IR) radiation in the
atmosphere. Radiation reflecting off of the earth’s surface within the IR spectra is easily absorbed by CO
2
, causing vibrations
within the molecule and trapping the energy.
6
A new material capable of substantially reducing carbon dioxide (CO
2
) emissions at room temperature and normal atmosphere
pressure. There are two main ways to stop the amount of greenhouse gases from increasing: we can stop adding them to the air,
and we can increase the Earth,s ability to pull them of the air. There are many terms in CO
2
concentration in atmosphere, carbon
positive, negative and neutral. Carbon positive is if the amount of CO
2
emissions remove from the atmosphere is less than the
amount of CO
2
emissions put into the atmosphere. Carbon negative is if the amount of CO
2
emissions remove from the
atmosphere is bigger than the amount of CO
2
emissions put into the atmosphere. Carbon neutral if the amount of CO
2
emissions
put into atmosphere is the same as the amount of CO
2
emissions remove from the atmosphere.
7
Increasing CO
2
concentration into atmosphere (carbon positive) by naturally mainly come from of breath of human life, such as
animals, human being and plantation at night. Increasing CO
2
into atmosphere by human activity come from burning fuel, such as
fossil fuels, coal, and biomass. Cement processing also release CO
2
gas. The decrease of CO
2
out from atmosphere (Carbon
negative) coming from the activities photosynthesis of the plantations. The decrease of CO
2
out from atmosphere by naturally
coming from absorbing by ocean, lands and catching by the air at atmosphere. The schematic of carbon positive and negative as
shown in Figure 1.
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LATEST TECHNOLOGY IN ENGINEERING,
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II. Carbon Source and Cycle
Figure 1. Carbon cycle.
8
There are many sources and carbon sinks naturally and anthropogenic (Fig.1) to enhance the carbon positive or negative.
Carbon positive occurs in many ways.
1. Fossil oil were mined and used as a fuel, the CO
2
gas release to atmosphere.
2. Degradation of CaCO
3
CaO + CO
2
, CO
2
entering the atmosphere.
3. Gas from volcano, the CO
2
entering to the atmosphere.
4. Dead bodies degraded and the gas entering to atmosphere, including the creature respiratory will CO
2
entering the
atmosphere.
5. Respiration plants, animals and humankind are releasing of CO
2
into atmosphere.
6. Burning fuels, coals and biomass are also release of CO
2
into atmosphere.
7. Degradation of iceberg in glacier
8. Volcano gas entering into atmosphere
Carbon negative occurs in many ways.
1. Process of photo-synthesis of plant they absorbed of CO
2
from atmosphere and metabolisms to plant body.
2. Plants were eaten by animals for metabolisms into animals tissue.
3. Dead plants and animals were buried in the layer of soil that carbon will degrade become fossil that can stand in a long
time.
4. Ocean was absorbed the CO
2
from atmosphere. The ocean temperature will influence of the capacity of absorb and
desorb of CO
2
in the water of ocean.
5. Land absorber CO
2
from atmosphere
III. Several Methods of Remove Co
2
Carbon negative was thought of the effort of reducing the CO
2
atmospheric concentration in order to maintain the level of CO
2
concentration. It’s can be done by naturally and anthropogenic processes. Carbon removal includes a range of approaches that
remove carbon dioxide (CO
2
) directly from the atmosphere. Some familiar approaches are tree planting and increasing carbon
storage in soil nature-based solutions which leverage and enhance natural carbon sinks. These are already being used around
the world; however, many are ready for broader application and would benefit from public and private funding to scale up faster
and improve inventory and monitoring capacity. There are six options for removing carbon from the atmosphere:
9
1). Forests, Photosynthesis removes carbon dioxide naturally.
The leaves of the forest trees are doing photosynthesis process. Photosynthesis is the process by which plants use sunlight, water,
and carbon dioxide to create oxygen and energy in the form of sugar. Trees are especially good at storing carbon removed from
the atmosphere by photosynthesis. The forest appear to be one of the more efficient forms of vegetation for converting light
energy to plant material.
10
Expanding, restoring and managing forests to encourage more carbon uptake can leverage the power
of photosynthesis, converting carbon dioxide in the air into carbon stored in wood and soils. Plants photosynthesis can slowdown
climate change but can’t stop it.
11
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2). Farms Soils naturally store carbon
Agricultural soils are running a big deficit due to intensive use. Even small increases in soil carbon per acre could be impactful.
Building soil carbon is good for farmers and ranchers, too, as it can increase soil health and crop yields. Integrating trees on farms
can also remove carbon while providing other benefits, like shade and forage for livestock. Agriculture together with animal
husbandry can be one of solutions to the problems of greenhouse gas emissions and climate change.
12
Farming has been shown to
absorb nearly 3% of global carbon emissions,
13
some scientists estimate that with enough regenerative farming, the global
carbon emissions absorbed back into the soil could be up to 15%.
14
3). Bio-energy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS)
Bio-energy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) is another way to use photosynthesis to combat climate change. However,
it is far more complicated than planting trees or managing soils and it doesn’t always work for the climate. BECCS is the process
of using biomass for energy in the industrial, power or transportation sectors. Capturing its emissions before they are released
back to the atmosphere; and then storing that captured carbon either underground or in long-lived products like concrete. If
BECCS causes more biomass to grow than would otherwise or stores more carbon instead of releasing it back into the
atmosphere, it can provide net carbon removal. Microalgal-based CO
2
sequestration aiming to sequester carbon back to the
biosphere, ultimately reducing greenhouse effects.
15
4). Direct Air Capture (DAC)
Direct air capture (DAC) is the process of chemically scrubbing carbon dioxide directly from the ambient air, and then storing it
either underground or in long-lived products. This new technology is similar to the carbon capture and storage technology used to
capture emissions from sources like power plants and industrial facilities. The difference is that direct air capture removes excess
carbon directly from the atmosphere, instead of capturing it at the source. It is relatively straightforward to measure and account
for the climate benefits of direct air capture, and its potential scale of deployment is enormous. But the technology remains costly
and energy-intensive.
DAC technology can deliver large-scale negative emissions by removing carbon dioxide directly from the atmosphere; and air to
fuels technology can significantly reduce the carbon footprint of transportation by creating clean synthetic fuels made from air,
water and renewable power.
16
Direct air capture (DAC) is a process of capturing carbon dioxide (CO
2
) directly from the ambient air (as opposed to capturing
from point sources, such as a cement factory or biomass power plant) and generating a concentrated stream of CO
2
for
sequestration or utilization or production of carbon-neutral fuel and wind gas. Carbon dioxide removal is achieved when ambient
air makes contact with chemical media, typically an aqueous alkaline solvent,
17
or sorbents.
18
Large-scale DAC deployment may
be accelerated when connected with economical applications or policy incentives. DAC is not an alternative to traditional, point-
source carbon capture and storage (CCS) but can be used to recapture some emissions from distributed sources, such as some
rocket launches.
19
When combined with long-term storage of CO
2
, DAC is known as direct air carbon capture and storage
(DACCS or DACS).
20
DACCS can act as a carbon dioxide removal mechanism.
The replacement of carbonate in cement allows for the potential absorption of carbon dioxide over concrete lifecycle. MOFs
exhibit high CO
2
capacity and selectivity for CO
2
,
21
due to their high surface functionality and porosity.
22
The increase of CO
2
concentration in the atmosphere and fears of resulting catastrophic global climate change have led to
increased demand for CO
2
capture and storage (CCS) technologies.
23,24
CO
2
absorption using chemical reaction is a common
process in the chemical industry, along with other processes, has been applied in the treatment of industrial gas streams
containing acid gases like H
2
S, NOx, and CO
2
. In these gas-treating processes, aqueous amine solutions are most commonly used,
especially monoethnolamine (MEA), diethanolamine (DEA).
25
5) Carbon mineralization
Carbon mineralization is the process by which carbon dioxide becomes a solid mineral, such as a carbonate. It is a chemical
reaction that happens when certain rocks are exposed to carbon dioxide. The biggest advantage of carbon mineralization is that
the carbon cannot escape back to the atmosphere.
26
Mineralization some minerals naturally react with CO, turning carbon from a gas into a solid. The process is commonly referred
to as carbon mineralization or enhanced weathering, and it naturally happens very slowly, over hundreds or thousands of years.
Scientists are figuring out how to speed up the carbon mineralization process, especially by enhancing the exposure of these
minerals to CO in the air or ocean.
Technologies to capture current CO
2
emissions, reuse and store CO
2
continue to be developed. One of the common themes across
these different technologies is the role of inorganic solid carbonate transformations using anthropogenic CO
2
and the
development of predictive controls over these pathways. CO
2
conversion to solid inorganic carbonates, also known as carbon
mineralization, is a thermodynamically downhill route that can be adapted for integration with CO
2
-emitting energy and resource
generating processes.
27
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LATEST TECHNOLOGY IN ENGINEERING,
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6) Ocean-Based Carbon Capture
Based carbon removal concepts have been proposed to leverage the ocean’s capacity to store carbon and identify approaches
beyond only land-based applications. However, nearly all of them are at early stages of development and need more research, and
in some cases pilot testing, to understand whether they are appropriate for investment given potential ecological, social and
governance impacts. Each approach aims to accelerate natural carbon cycles in the ocean.
They could include leveraging photosynthesis in coastal plants, seaweed or phytoplankton; adding certain minerals to increase
storage of dissolved bicarbonate; or running an electric current through seawater to help extract CO. Some ocean-based carbon
removal options could also provide co-benefits. For example, coastal blue carbon and seaweed cultivation could remove carbon
while also supporting ecosystem restoration, and adding minerals to help the ocean store carbon could also reduce ocean
acidification.
The ocean covers about 70% of the Earth's surface and already buffers a large fraction of anthropogenic CO
2
emissions. The
global capacity for natural carbon sequestration is in the ocean. Natural processes on land and ocean have removed roughly 55%
of emitted CO
2
, but it may be possible to enhance both the uptake and longer-term sequestration potential of these processes.
28
But now a growing number of researchers, companies and even national governments have begun to look at the ocean as a
potential location for carbon dioxide removal. These approaches aim to leverage the ocean’s natural chemical and biological
processes to absorb and store more carbon from the atmosphere.
29
7) Biochar
Biochar is created by the pyrolysis of biomass and is under investigation as a method of carbon sequestration. Biochar is a
pyrolyzed product of biomass, is richer in aromatic carbon (C) and poorer in oxygen which provides structural recalcitrance to it
against microbial decomposition in soil. Biochar, being a stable source of C when applied to soil, remains there for longer period
of time imparting long-term soil C sequestration.
Biochar is a charcoal that is used for agricultural purposes which also aids in carbon sequestration, the capture or hold of carbon.
It is created using a process called pyrolysis, which is basically the act of high temperature heating biomass in an environment
with low oxygen levels. What remains is a material known as char, similar to charcoal but is made through a sustainable process,
thus the use of biomass. Biomass is organic matter produced by living organisms or recently living organisms, most commonly
plants or plant based material. A study done by the UK Biochar Research Center has stated that, on a conservative level, biochar
can store 1 gigaton of carbon per year. With greater effort in marketing and acceptance of biochar, the benefit could be the
storage of 59 gigatons per year of carbon in biochar soils.
30
Multiple independent estimates show that biochar has a mean
residence time in soils on the order of 1300 to 4000 years.
31
The matter degradation is very rapid due to constantly high temperatures and moisture levels. In Australia estimates of mean
residence time for naturally biochar carbon are 1300 2600 years.
32
Biochar is stable, fixed, and recalcitrant carbon can store
large amounts of greenhouse gases in the ground centuries, potentially sequester carbon in the soil for hundreds to thousands of
years, like coal.
33
Carbon negative technology would lead to a net withdrawal of CO
2
from atmosphere.
Madejski
34
descripted that just four different ways to reduce CO
2
emission level:
(1) reducing the use of fossil fuel by
- improving the efficiency of energy conversion processes.
- reducing the demand for energy
- using renewable energy sources, such as hydropower, wind, biomass, solar cell and nuclear power
- Increasing the use green hydrogen energy
(2) Replace technologies using fossil fuels with a low carbon to hydrogen.
(3) Capturing CO
2
from fuel combustion in power plants and other industrial processes.
(4) Limiting deforestation processes and thus storing more CO
2
in biomass.
IV. Carbon Sequestration
Carbon sequestration is the long-term storage of carbon in plants, soils, geologic, and the ocean. Carbon sequestration is secures
carbon dioxide to prevent it from entering the Earth’s atmosphere. The idea is to stabilize carbon in solid and dissolved forms so
that it doesn’t cause the atmosphere to warm.
Carbon is found in all living organisms and is the major building block for life on Earth. Carbon exists in many forms,
predominately as plant biomass, soil organic matter, and as the gas carbon dioxide (CO
2
) in the atmosphere and dissolved in
seawater. Carbon sequestration is the long-term storage of carbon in oceans, soils, vegetation (especially forests), and geologic
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formations. Although oceans store most of the Earth’s carbon, soils contain approximately 75% of the carbon pool on land, three
times more than the amount stored in living plants and animals. Therefore, soils play a major role in maintaining a balanced
global carbon cycle.
35
The primary way that carbon is stored in the soil is as soil organic matter (SOM). SOM is a complex mixture of carbon
compounds, consisting of decomposing plant and animal tissue, microbes (protozoa, nematodes, fungi, and bacteria), and carbon
associated with soil minerals. Carbon can remain stored in soils for millennia, or be quickly released back into the atmosphere.
Climatic conditions, natural vegetation, soil texture, and drainage all affect the amount and length of time carbon is stored.
36
Removing CO
2
from the atmosphere is only one significant benefit of enhanced carbon storage in soils. Improved soil and water
quality, decreased nutrient loss, reduced soil erosion, increased water conservation, and greater crop production may result from
increasing the amount of carbon stored in agricultural soils. Management techniques, which are successful in providing a net
carbon sink in soils.
3
High levels of fossil fuel combustion and deforestation have transformed large pools of fossil carbon (coal and oil) into
atmospheric carbon dioxide. Strategies aimed at reducing CO
2
in the atmosphere include soil carbon sequestration, tree planting,
and ocean sequestration of carbon. Other technological strategies to reduce carbon inputs include developing energy efficient
fuels, and efforts to develop and implement non-carbon energy sources. All of these efforts combined can reduce CO
2
concentrations in the atmosphere and help to alleviate global warming.
38
Carbon as forests grow, they store carbon in woody tissues and soil organic matter. The net rate of carbon uptake is greatest when
forests are young, and slows with time. Old forests can sequester carbon for a long time but provide essentially no net uptake.
When forests are cut, the carbon they contain may be quickly returned to the atmosphere if the woody tissue is burned or
converted to products, such as paper, that are short-lived. If the wood is used for construction or furniture, then those products
retain carbon during their lifetimes and act as carbon sinks. A post harvest approach that reduces waste and puts most of the wood
into long-lived products is an effective strategy to help reduce global atmospheric carbon. However, the net sink for carbon in
long-lived wood products is still relatively small, so forest cutting ultimately acts to reduce the storage of carbon on land.
39
V. Biochar is a Carbon Sequestration
The main reason that biochar is considered to be a direct approach for carbon sequestration is that the carbon in biochar is mainly
composed of recalcitrant carbon, which is resistant to degradation by microorganisms and can persist in the environment for
hundreds or even thousands of years.
40,41
Carbon sequestration refers to the capture and long-term storage of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO
2
), a major greenhouse gas
contributing to global warming and climate change. In recent decades the production and use of biochar has been considered as a
strategy for reducing the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. This can potentially be achieved in direct and indirect ways.
The main reason that biochar is considered to be a direct approach for carbon sequestration is that the carbon in biochar is mainly
composed of recalcitrant carbon, which is resistant to degradation by microorganisms and can persist in the environment for
hundreds or even thousands of years. By converting biomass into biochar, the carbon in the biomass is stabilized and locked
away, preventing it from being rapidly released back into the atmosphere as CO
2
which would otherwise be the case as the
biomass feedstock is consumed or decomposes. Hence, providing that the biomass that is used to produce the biochar is
replenished. The net effect of growing biomass for the production of biochar is that the atmospheric CO
2
is sequestered in the
soil in a stable form.
Biochar can potentially indirectly reduce anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions by improving soil quality through its
enhancement of nutrient and water retention. This results in a reduction in the acidity of the soil and provides a more favourable
habitat for beneficial soil microorganisms. These improvements can increase agricultural productivity and potentially reduce the
need for synthetic fertilizers, a source of greenhouse gas emissions.
Bochar production and mixing in soil are seen as the best options for atmospheric carbon sequestration, providing simultaneous
benefits to soil and opportunities for distributed energy generation. The proximity of biomass source and biochar dispersal greatly
reduces the energy and emissions footprint of the whole process. The viability of the whole biochar process is examined from two
boundary points: is there enough biomass around to have significant impact on the atmospheric CO
2
levels and is there enough
soil area for biochar dispersal.
42
Biochar is comprised of recalcitrant carbon resistant to microbial degradation, thus contributes to environmental sustainability
(ES) through carbon sequestration. Production of biochar from crop residue offers an environmentally safe alternative to avoid
open-field crop residue burning. Its application to soil reduces greenhouse gas emissions and acts as a beneficial soil ameliorant.
Although literature is available on climate change abatement benefits of biochar application in agriculture, this manuscript
explores the benefits of biochar addition in vegetable cropping systems for maintenance of edaphic properties that govern soil
sustainability.
43
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Only carbon removal can balance hard-to-abate emissions and get us to the required net-zero emissions scenario. Biochar Carbon
Removal (BCR) is an innovation with game-changing potential. From its carbon removal capabilities to the vast array of co-
benefits it offers, BCR is set to become an essential part of any carbon removal portfolio.
When biochar is incorporated into construction materials such as concrete, it becomes an integral part of the material, effectively
preventing its physical separation and degradation. As a result, biochar used in construction contributes to long-term carbon
removal.
Creating biochar reduces CO
2
in the atmosphere because the process takes the carbon-neutral process of decomposing organic
matter and turns it carbon-negative: Plants absorb and store C0
2
as they grow but emit this back when they decay. Biochar
stabilizes that carbon in a biologically unavailable form, sequestering it out of the atmosphere and into the soil for potentially
hundreds or even thousands of years.
44
Five key issues closely related to the application of biochar for C sequestration in soil and review its outstanding advances.
Specifically, the terms use of biochar, pyrochar, and hydrochar, the stability of biochar in soil, the effect of biochar on the flux
and speciation changes of C in soil, the emission of nitrogen-containing greenhouse gases induced by biochar production and soil
application, and the application barriers of biochar in soil are expounded.
45
VI. Carbon Balance
The goal of reducing of CO
2
is to make the concentration of CO
2
in atmosphere is not increase. The increasing of CO
2
concentration in atmosphere may cause the increasing of atmosphere temperature, it’s may cause global warming and climate
change. To avoid the global warming and climate change the concentration of CO
2
in atmosphere is not change drastically, the
CO
2
input output into atmosphere should be in balance condition.
This waste could be oxidized to resupply CO
2
to the plants, but this would not be needed unless the system were highly closed
with regard to food. For example, in a partially closed system where some of the food is grown and some is imported, CO
2
from
oxidized waste when combined with crew and microbial respiration could exceed the CO
2
removal capability of the plants.
46
The Carbon Balance tool allows to estimate the saving in CO
2
emissions expected. The basis of this calculation are so-called Life
Cycle Emissions (LCE), which represent the emissions of CO
2
associated to a given component or energy amount. These values
include the total life cycle of a component or energy amount, including production, operation, maintenance, disposal, etc.
Carbon is in a constant state of movement from place to place. It is stored in what are known as reservoirs, and it moves between
these reservoirs through a variety of processes, including photosynthesis, burning fossil fuels, and simply releasing breath from
the lungs. The movement of carbon from reservoir to reservoir is known as the carbon cycle.
47
Carbon can be stored in a variety of reservoirs, including plants and animals, which is why they are considered carbon life forms.
Carbon is used by plants to build leaves and stems, which are then digested by animals and used for cellular growth. In the
atmosphere, carbon is stored in the form of gases, such as carbon dioxide. It is also stored in oceans, captured by many types of
marine organisms. Some organisms, such as clams or coral, use the carbon to form shells and skeletons. Most of the carbon on the
planet is contained within rocks, minerals, and other sediment buried beneath the surface of the planet.
48
Because Earth is a closed system, the amount of carbon on the planet never changes. However, the amount of carbon in a specific
reservoir can change over time as carbon moves from one reservoir to another. For example, some carbon in the atmosphere
might be captured by plants to make food during photosynthesis. This carbon can then be ingested and stored in animals that eat
the plants.
49
When the animals die, they decompose, and their remains become sediment, trapping the stored carbon in layers that eventually
turn into rock or minerals. Some of this sediment might form fossil fuels, such as coal, oil, or natural gas, which release carbon
back into the atmosphere when the fuel is burned.
50
The carbon cycle is vital to life on Earth. Nature tends to keep carbon levels balanced, meaning that the amount of carbon
naturally released from reservoirs is equal to the amount that is naturally absorbed by reservoirs. Maintaining this carbon balance
allows the planet to remain hospitable for life. Scientists believe that humans have upset this balance by burning fossil fuels,
which has added more carbon to the atmosphere than usual and led to climate change and global warming.
51
Humanity already possesses the fundamental scientific, technical, and industrial know-how to solve the carbon and climate
problem for the next half-century. A portfolio of technologies now exists to meet the world's energy needs over the next 50 years
and limit atmospheric CO
2
to a trajectory that avoids a doubling of the preindustrial CO
2
concentration.
52
A “wedge” is an
activity reducing the rate of carbon build-up in the atmosphere that grows in 50 years from zero to 1.0 giga ton of carbon
(GtC)/year.
It is thought that limit atmospheric CO
2
to a concentration that would prevent most damaging climate change have focused on a
goal of 500 ± 50 parts per million (ppm). The current CO
2
concentration is 375 ppm.
1
A stabilization wedge represents an
activity that starts at zero reduction of emission in 2005 and increases linearly until it accounts for 1 GtC/year of reduction carbon
emissions in 2055. Each wedge is represents a cumulative total of 25 GtC of reduced emissions over 50 years.
53
The current
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technology to provide a wedge is used fuel with low carbon contain. A total of seven wedges are required to stabilise emissions at
500 ppm CO
2
in fifty years.
When biochar is inserted in soil, the effect is to remove carbon from the atmosphere and store it underground, where it does not
contribute to global warming. The largest outstanding question about biochar is how much of a difference it can make in slowing
global warming.
54
Biochar, has calculated that if biochar were added to 10 percent of global cropland, the effect would be to
sequester 29 billion tons of CO
2
equivalent, it’s roughly equal to humanity’s annual greenhouse gas emissions.
33
Maintaining the
emission of carbon in the year of 2055 similar the emission in the year 2005 we must store carbon as amount as 7 wedges.
52
Biochar can be produced from biomass waste that is good for environment. Production of biomass to achieve the amount equal to
1 GtC is great amount of biomass to be produced. In agricultural and forest industries produced of biomass waste in great
amount.
55
Conversion of biomass waste into carbon, carbon sequestration was explained by Stoyle.
56
Conclusion
Carbon element in the earth is closed system that the amount of carbon is not change, but the carbon formula is different in
chemical formula. Carbon can be form in many formulas such as of CO
2
in atmosphere, carbon is a C form as chars, carbon is in
the plants and animals tissue, carbon is a CO
2
form as a dissolved in the ocean, carbon is a CO
2
dissolved in the soil, C in the
rocky form such as CaCO
3
, MgCO
3
, C in the form of organic chemical such as organic chemical, C in the form of fossil oil and
gas. Carbon in the form of element is different concentration to each other sometime high and sometime lower.
The CO
2
enter and out into atmosphere were called carbon positive and negative. Carbon positive and negative should be in
balance to maintain the CO
2
concentration in atmosphere. To maintain the carbon balance in the atmosphere is a complex reaction
that the speed of reaction is not in the same in each reaction. Nowadays, the burning fuel is the most the carbon positive added to
the atmosphere.
There is a current technologies of stabilization wedges that solving the climate problem for the next 50 years. Limit atmospheric
CO
2
to a concentration of 500 ppm. Targets for CO
2
emission of 500 ppm was maintaining with reducing emissions at 7 wedges.
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