3DDave
I called the pyrolysis product of waste plastics "char" not "biochar" If you understood the chemistry behind the makeup of plastics it is all H and C molecules. There is no reason why the char cannot be used for agricultural purposes. The reason why it is not is because no one has studied it for that purpose because there was no need to. Now there is a need to. This probably is not a new idea. These ideas keep getting recycled over and over again over time. It is just that now we understand things better.
Showing you the business case in this setting takes too long and is a waste of time
I would totally disagree with you on the point that carbon in the soil is converted to CO2 by microorganisms and not stored.
I'll go one step better than a mom and pop operation example you provided for me. I will give you my competitor's website...ready....
Again, this is an emerging market.
There is a really big time competitor that is really gasifying their biosolids but are claiming to make biochar. They are fibbing but they see the potential in the market I am in.
Read this site
BTW my background is in sewage treatment. I have been designing custom sewage plants for municipalities for 40 years
Char is just carbon. You and I know it as Home Depot charcoal. Different feedstocks have a different fixed carbon percentage. Wood based char and plastics based char have no nitrogen or phosphorous in it. Biosolids on the other hand does have nitrogen and phosphorus in it. The pyrolysis heating process, however, drives out a lot of the nitrogen. The phosphorus is left intact. How do you get nitrogen back into the biochar? You inoculate it by, for example, mixing it with compost.
Wood based biochar and plastics based char does not have any nitrogen or phosphorus to begin with. The biochar/char has to be innoculated. Besides agriculture, the applications for biochar and its more potent cousin, activated carbon, in the gaseous and aqueous pollution control field alone is staggering. All this from a waste nobody wanted.
Look at the 32.50 mark on this video
We make activated carbon from biochar