[Terrapreta] Australian developed technology wins United Nations World Environment Day Award - Press release

Tom Miles tmiles at trmiles.com
Wed Jun 6 00:38:26 EDT 2007


http://terrapreta.bioenergylists.org/bestUNaward

 

BEST Energies wins top honour at the 2007 UN Association of Australia's
World Environment Day Awards for 'Meeting the Greenhouse Challenge'. 

The locally developed BEST pyrolysis technology -hailed by leading
environmentalist Tim Flannery as one of the most important available for
stabilising the world's climate --has been chosen by the United Nations
Association of Australia as the winner of their major World Environment Day
Awards category 'Meeting the Greenhouse Challenge' along with project
partners the NSW Department of Primary Industries. 

Adriana Downie, who accepted the award for BEST Energies, said the
commercial uptake of the BEST pyrolysis technology will result in
significant carbon sequestration and Greenhouse gas mitigation. "Adoption of
the technology will deliver long-term sustainability benefits of increased
soil health and therefore agricultural productivity" 

The slow pyrolysis technology developed by BEST Energies is particularly
exciting because it not only produces a renewable energy to displace the use
of fossil fuel, but it also produces a very stable form of solid carbon
which can be sequestered over the long term in soils. 

This process has been developed by BEST Energies Australia with support from
the NSW Department of Environment and Climate Change and involves heating
green waste or other biomass without oxygen to generate renewable energy and
agrichar. BEST Energies has a fully integrated pilot plant operating at
their demonstration site at Somersby, on the Central Coast of NSW. 

Adriana Downie said once the high carbon char product, Agrichar, is added as
an amendment to agricultural soils some of the most remarkable and promising
benefits of this technology become apparent. Experiments conducted by the
NSW Department of Primary Industries have demonstrated that the char product
can improve several soil health indicators as well as increase crop yields
and productivity. 

NSW DPI research scientist Dr Lukas Van Zwieten has found that when applied
at 10t/ha, the biomass of wheat was tripled and of soybeans was more than
doubled. 

Van Zwieten said the agrichar product also decreases emissions of the
powerful greenhouse gas nitrous oxide from soils and increases the
efficiency of nitrogen fertilisers. 

NSW Primary Industries Minister, Ian Macdonald said this new process offers
hope for using soils as a carbon "sink". 

Tim Flannery, Australian of the Year, renowned scientist and author of 'The
Weather Makers", is a major advocate of agrichar and pyrolysis. In The
Bulletin magazine, Flannery recently listed "fostering pyrolysis-based
technologies" fourth among his five steps for saving the planet. 

The UN Association award winners for World Environment Day were announced at
a ceremony in Melbourne on Friday June 1. World Environment Day is the 5th
of June. 

For further information and photographs please contact Adriana Downie
Office: (02) 43404911 Mobile: 0425265130 Email: adriana at bestenergies.com.au 

 

 

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: /pipermail/terrapreta_bioenergylists.org/attachments/20070605/d62bb6f6/attachment-0001.html 


More information about the Terrapreta mailing list