The Biochar Revolution
A friendly, informative inspiring and encyclopedic reference guide for anyone interested in biochar or concerned about environmental issues. The book has contributions from 18 biochar experts and authors. Heavily illustrated.
The Biochar Solution: Carbon Farming and Climate Change
Conventional agriculture destroys our soils, pollutes our water and is a major contributor to climate change. What if our agricultural practices could stabilize, or even reverse these trends?
The Biochar Solution explores the dual function of biochar as a carbon-negative energy source and a potent soil-builder. Created by burning biomass in the absence of oxygen, this material has the unique ability to hold carbon back from the atmosphere while simultaneously enhancing soil fertility. Author Albert Bates traces the evolution of this extraordinary substance from the ancient black soils of the Amazon to its reappearance as a modern carbon sequestration strategy.
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Combining practical techniques for the production and use of biochar with an overview of the development and future of carbon farming, The Biochar Solution describes how a new agricultural revolution can reduce net greenhouse gas emissions to below zero while increasing world food reserves and creating energy from biomass wastes.
Biochar and carbon farming can:
* Reduce fossil fuels inputs into our food system
* Bring new life to desert landscapes
* Save cooking and heating fuel with super-efficient stoves
* Help build carbon-negative homes, communities and nations.
Biochar is not without dangers if unregulated, and it is not a panacea, but if it fulfills its promise of taking us back from the brink of irreversible climate change, it may well be the most important discovery in human history.
Albert Bates was a civil sector representative at the Copenhagen climate conference, trying to point the world back towards a stable atmosphere using soils and trees. His books include Climate in Crisis and The Post-Petroleum Survival Guide and Cookbook. Working with the Global Ecovillage Network he has taught appropriate technology, natural building and permaculture to students from more than 60 nations.
Climate in Crisis: The Greenhouse Effect and What You Can Do
One of the clearest pictures of the greenhouse effect – how it works, what is happening now, and what we can do about it. This book, now a classic, if dated, drew upon the available scientific literature prior to 1990 to project what would happen if emissions continued and efforts to negotiate a binding treaty failed. The predictions are astonishingly prescient and hold up well more than 20 years later. Bates’ chapter on the worst-case “runaway greenhouse effect” is especially gripping, given recent evidence of tipping points having been reached. Graphs and illustrations to help you visualize a complex science. This book came with a foreword by then Senator Al Gore, who sent it to all members of Congress and read it as inspiration for Earth in the Balance.
Conversations on Collapse
Conversations on Collapse collects early interviews that turned a podcast intended to focus on transformative technologies into one that explores the multiple failure modes of technological civilization. Featuring interviews with Albert Bates, Bill McKibben, Dmitry Orlov, Sharon Astyk, James Howard Kunstler, Joe Bageant, Thomas Homer-Dixon and other authors and thinkers on the topic of collapse.
B. Woodside writes:
Regular listeners to KMO's C-Realm Podcast will know what I'm talking about. On Wednesday of every week for the past few years now, I've been religiously checking my iTunes podcast inbox for the latest installment out of the C-Realm (the "C", as fellow podcaster Black Beauty occasionally reminds us, standing for, among other things, Consciousness), and I can't think of an instance in which I've been disappointed.
As I write this review, KMO is currently up to podcast number two hundred and twenty-seven, and there hasn't been a bummer in the lot. Somehow, through tech glitches, bad phone connections, intermittent Internet service, aging computer malfunctions, and domestic upheaval, he has managed to not only remain true to his schedule, but has steadfastly maintained a level of intelligent, courteous, and thoughtful discourse with a succession of remarkable contemporary authors, artists, pundits, lecturers, scientists, philosophers, theorists, and even an Archdruid, asking the pointed questions you want him to ask and then stepping aside to graciously allow his interview subjects the freedom to respond at length. It's a rare thing these days to experience, in any venue, conversations that seem to flow along so effortlessly, despite the fact that the participants are seldom in physical proximity. And, at least for this listener, there's a sense of privilege - that one gets to sit in, like the proverbial fly on the wall, listening to thoughtful people talk about things that matter.
This first volume of transcripts, "Conversations on Collapse," manages to capture the flavor of the podcasts without trying to somehow reproduce the experience (which accounts for the absence of the roosters, who punctuate the beginning and end of each recorded episode with a cry that's like a zen wake-up call or a slap upside the head.) Better still, the transcripts follow the thread of the "collapse" theme, sending it in any number of different directions, building on and amplifying the subject as one proceeds through the book, touching on the crucial concerns of food security, economic dislocation, and cultural re-evaluation.
There's a method to their placement that is more than mere chronology; you can sense the intellectual curiosity that is driving KMO to interview these particular guests and ask them these particular questions, guiding them back towards the subject when they threaten to stray too far afield but at the same time allowing them to take the random turn into an interesting byway (the conversation with blogger Joe Bageant is a fascinating case in point.) You get a sense of where, at any particular point in time, his sympathies may lie, but he is not there to score points at his guests' expense. When he presses them, his aim is always in the service of clarification.
Dan Krotz writes:
The transformation of citizens into simple consumers is a prevalent theme though out the interviews, summarized by Bageant as "the Stockholm syndrome of the soul," where people become willing hostages to corporations and political parties that con them into acting against their own best interests. This allows people to believe that we are, for example, "supporting our troops" by waging war in the Middle East at the cost of $100 million dollars a day with money borrowed from the Chinese.
KMO's intent and the intentions of the people he interviews is to create awareness that "this time" things are different: bad things are going to happen if we don't throw off the shackles of consumerism and our enslavement to party politics.
Whether we throw off shackles or throw rascals out of office ultimately depends on whether people are willing to change how they live. We've done a poor job of accepting change, as a people and as a civilization, for most of our history. But if KMO is right, we should get ready.
The Post-Petroleum Survival Guide and Cookbook: Recipes for Changing Times
Over the coming years we will need to move from a global culture addicted to cheap, abundant petroleum to a culture of compelled conservation, whether through government directive or market forces. The Post-Petroleum Survival Guide and Cookbook provides useful practical advice for preparing your family and community to make the transition.
This book takes a positive, upbeat, and optimistic view of “the Great Change,” promoting the idea that it can be an opportunity to redeem our essential interconnectedness with nature and with each other. The many rifts that have grown up since oil became the world’s prime commodity can be mended: between cities and their food sources; the design of the suburban-built environment and its car-oriented sprawl; runaway greenhouse warming, and the clearing of forests and toxification of rivers, oceans, and land.
Topics covered include:
• Rebuilding civilization
• Changing your needs
• Water and waste disposal
• Energy and transportation
• Equipment and tools
• Food storage and first aid
Also including lighthearted, playful recipes—some using basic, wholesome foods, some illustrating food growing or preservation, and all emphasizing organic, flavorful, and locally grown produce that can readily substitute one for another—this book is about having your catastrophe and eating it too.
About the Author
Albert Bates is an Environmental Educator and Founder of the Ecovillage Training Center at The Farm in Tennessee. He has been instrumental in facilitating the growth of the worldwide ecovillage movement into an organization of more than 20,000 communities on six continents with more than one million residents.


