Agriculture sits at a difficult crossroads: it must feed a growing global population while reigning in its massive contribution to global greenhouse gas emissions. While mixing biochar—a specialized, porous charcoal made from organic waste—into farmland has emerged as a popular climate-smart strategy, the microscopic mechanics of why it works so well have remained difficult to pin down. Now, a sweeping new evaluation cuts through the uncertainty, mapping exactly how this charred biomass rewires the biological behavior of soil.
Directed by corresponding author Dr. Bin Hu at the Center of Molecular Ecophysiology (CMEP), College of Resources and Environment at Southwest University , the research team synthesized data from 78 distinct global studies. Their findings, published in Carbon Research , provide the most detailed blueprint to date detailing the chain reactions triggered by biochar, from altering basic mineral balances to changing the daily habits of subterranean microbes.
Rather than just acting as a static vault for storing carbon, the study reveals that biochar functions as a highly active biological regulator. When added to agricultural systems, it physically restructures the earth, boosting porosity and moisture retention while driving up total soil organic carbon by 24%.
Crucially, the team at Southwest University discovered that biochar intentionally disrupts the soil's nitrogen cycle. It suppresses specific enzyme activities and slows down processes like nitrification and denitrification—the exact chemical pathways responsible for releasing some of the most damaging greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
The Numbers Behind the Cooling Effect:
This extensive review moves environmental agronomy past simple trial-and-error. By proving that targeted, crop-specific biochar deployment fundamentally shifts soil chemistry and enzyme activity, Dr. Hu's team has delivered a highly practical, scalable handbook for the future of food production.
As global policymakers search for viable ways to achieve net-zero emissions, the research coming out of the Center of Molecular Ecophysiology confirms that the ground beneath our feet remains one of our best defenses against a warming sky.
Journal reference: Ngaba, M.J.Y., Mgelwa, A.S., Ibrahim, M.M. et al. Biochar amendments mitigate soil greenhouse gas emissions by shifted soil properties, enzyme activities, and nitrogen cycling processes. Carbon Res. 5 , 14 (2026).
https://doi.org/10.1007/s44246-025-00241-5
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About Carbon Research
The journal Carbon Research is an international multidisciplinary platform for communicating advances in fundamental and applied research on natural and engineered carbonaceous materials that are associated with ecological and environmental functions, energy generation, and global change. It is a fully Open Access (OA) journal and the Article Publishing Charges (APC) are waived until Dec 31, 2025. It is dedicated to serving as an innovative, efficient and professional platform for researchers in the field of carbon functions around the world to deliver findings from this rapidly expanding field of science. The journal is currently indexed by Scopus and Ei Compendex, and as of June 2025, the dynamic CiteScore value is 15.4.
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Biochar amendments mitigate soil greenhouse gas emissions by shifted soil properties, enzyme activities, and nitrogen cycling processes
18-Feb-2026
The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.