Conference Announcement for the International Agrichar Initiative (IAI)

Conference Announcement for the International Agrichar Initiative (IAI) April 29-May 2, 2007 Terrigal, New South Wales, Australia

What is the International Agrichar Initiative?
The International Agrichar Initiative is an informal, newly-formed coalition of research, commercial
and policy-oriented people and organizations devoted to the sustainability of the world’s soils, and to
sustainable bio-energy production. Agrichar production and utilization can renew the world’s soils
through the addition of organic carbon, which can help solve the pressing problem of global climate
change. The Agrichar production process also converts agricultural waste into valuable bio-fuels.

What is the ‘Agrichar process’?
Agricultural feedstocks such as animal manure, rice hulls, peanut shells, corn stover or forest waste are
pyrolized at low temperatures to produce a char product (“Agrichar” or “biochar”) and separate bio-energy
streams, in the form of oils and/or gases. The biochar captures about 50% of the carbon in the feedstock, and
can be used as a soil amendment to improve soil fertility, stability, and productivity, and to store carbon in
the soils, as a means of mitigating global warming. The use of Agrichar in soils mimics the Terra Preta (“dark
earth”) soils of the Amazon Basin, which have sequestered high quantities of carbon for thousands of years,
and have dramatically improved soil fertility and sustainability without chemical inputs. The bio-energy produced, which accounts for the other 50% of feedstock carbon, can be used to fuel a variety of energy needs.
During the 18th World Congress of Soil Science (WCSS) in July 2006 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a group
of scientists, business interests, policy experts and others met to discuss the research priorities and challenges of this important area. The result is the International Agrichar Initiative, a movement to pursue a
more organized research, development and commercialization effort to further the promise of Agrichar.
For information on the July 2006 meeting in Philadelphia and some current Agrichar-related projects and
activities, go to: http://www.css.cornell.edu/faculty/lehmann/biochar/WCSS2006/WCSSmeeting2006.htm

Conference Objectives
In follow-up to the July 2006 meeting, the 2007 conference will review progress achieved in the field of
Agrichar production and utilization in the following areas:

Research, Development, and Deployment:
- Review the results of research and development work in the field of Agrichar and energy co-production
- Review demonstration and commercial programs that have been operating in the field
- Identify barriers to commercialization of the Agrichar product and technology, and methods to overcome these barriers
- Visit sites where Agrichar R&D is underway in Australia

Policy and Education Development
- Review new policy and educational initiatives in the field
- Review economic and environmental studies on the costs and benefits of Agrichar production and utilization

Organizational
- Review the goals and tenets of the International Agrichar Initiative
- Review initiatives and progress to establishing an International Agrichar Organization
- Prepare a business and development plan for the International Agrichar Initiative, including specific funding and development proposals, and stated programs goals, timelines
- Prioritize key management questions to be resolved in order to bring the Agrichar agenda to the next stageNike Air Max 270