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Frequently asked questions
General
Biochar is a clean, carbon-rich material made by heating organic matter like wood or crop residues in low oxygen. It looks like charcoal, but it’s made for soil, not fires.
Because of its porous structure, it holds water and nutrients, supports microbes, and stays stable in the ground for centuries. It’s one of the simplest, most natural ways to improve soil while keeping carbon locked safely below our feet.
Almost any clean, untreated biomass feedstock - things like forest trimmings, orchard prunings, crop residues, or storm-fallen branches.
The key is that it’s natural and reasonably dry. There’s no need for grinding or pelletising; our large loading mouth takes long pieces and irregular material easily.
Very safe. The entire process happens inside a closed, insulated chamber with an integrated flame cap that prevents embers from escaping.
Once quenched, the biochar cools quickly and is stable to handle. Training covers simple safety checks, fire-watch protocols, and handling guidelines - nothing more complex than standard farm machinery use.
It depends on your soil type and application rate, but research across hundreds of field trials gives clear ranges:
• Sandy or loamy soils: water-holding capacity rises 10-25%, sometimes more at rates of 2-6% by weight (around 30-70 tonnes per hectare).
• Coarse, fire-damaged soils: plant-available water often increases 20-30%, helping vegetation recover faster.
• Clay soils: drainage and infiltration improve even if water-holding doesn’t change much.
In real-world terms, crops stay healthier between irrigations and bounce back more quickly from drought.
Yes - most farms see measurable gains within the first season.
• Year 1: average yield increase 5-15%, even with no change in fertiliser.
• Years 2-3: improvements usually reach 15-30% as soil biology stabilises.
At the same time, farmers often cut fertiliser rates by 10-30% because nutrients stay in the root zone longer.
No. Our systems process renewable biomass feedstocks, not regulated waste.
They’re classed as beneficial use under most state definitions (including TCEQ in Texas and CARB in California).
Because the unit is enclosed and low-emission, it can be operated safely in most agricultural and forestry settings without air-quality complications.
Yes. Every ton of verified production earns CharMiles™ points — our field reward system. You can redeem them for equipment, training, or community grants.
And because the unit’s onboard sensors record every batch, the same data can support biochar carbon-removal certification with recognised programs such as Puro.Earth or EBC.
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