Bury it, don’t burn it: turning biomass waste into a carbon solution
- Graphyte
- Jun 3
- 2 min read
Waste biomass created by forestry work, crop production and wildfire mitigation is often simply burned, releasing the carbon stored within. But what if we could stop that carbon from entering the atmosphere by burying the biomass instead? Michael Allen investigates
A tomb in a mine
Another carbon-removal company, however, claims it has hit this benchmark using biomass burial. “We’re selling our first credits at $100 per tonne,” says Hannah Murnen, chief technology officer at Graphyte – a US firm backed by Bill Gates.
Graphyte is confident that there is significant potential in biomass burial. Based in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, the firm dries and compresses waste biomass into blocks before storage. “We dry it to below a level at which life can exist,” says Murnen, which effectively halts decomposition.
The company claims that it will soon be storing 50,000 tonnes of CO2 per year and is aiming for five million tonnes per year by 2030. Murnen acknowledges that these are “really significant figures”, particularly compared with what has been achieved in carbon capture so far. Nevertheless, she adds, if you look at the targets around carbon capture “this is the type of scale we need to get to”.

Graphyte is currently working with sawmill residue and rice hulls, but in the future Murnen says it plans to accept all sorts of biomass waste. “One of the great things about biomass for the purpose of carbon removal is that, because we are not doing any sort of chemical transformation on the biomass, we’re very flexible to the type of biomass,” Murnen adds.
And there appears to be plenty available. Estimates by researchers in the UK and India (NPJ Climate and Atmospheric Science 2 35) suggest that every year around 140 Gt of biomass waste is generated globally from forestry and agriculture.
Around two-thirds of the agricultural residues are from cereals, like wheat, rice, barley and oats, while sugarcane stems and leaves are the second largest contributors. The rest is made up of things like leaves, roots, peels and shells from other crops. Like forest residues, much of this waste ends up being burnt or left to rot, releasing its carbon.
Currently, Graphyte has one storage site about 30 km from Pine Bluff, where its compressed biomass blocks are stored underground, enclosed in an impermeable layer that prevents water ingress. “We took what used to be an old gravel mine – so basically a big hole in the ground – and we’ve created a lined storage tomb where we are placing the biomass and then sealing it closed,” says Murnen.
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