
Biochar
Modern biochar plants use advanced pyrolysis technology to convert agricultural and forestry residues into stable carbon-rich material with wide applications in soil health, water retention, and pollution remediation. Through this process, carbon is locked away for hundreds of years, making biochar production a recognized method of carbon sequestration and eligible for carbon credits under global sustainability frameworks. By coupling waste-to-value innovation with climate-positive outcomes, biochar plants not only support regenerative agriculture but also create new revenue streams through participation in carbon markets.
We operate a biochar unit on a 33-acre site in Kountze, Southeast Texas.
Heating biomass at high temperatures without oxygen results in biochar.
This process, known as pyrolysis, concentrates carbon in a form that is very resistant to biological decomposition.
The Biochar produced using the pyrolysis process forms a long -term chemical and biologically stable carbon bond, sequestering carbon in farm land soil and making it an ideal technology in recycling back carbon emissions from fossil fuel burning and other processes.