About the Project

Building on previous research and trials, this project focuses on scaling up the use of basalt to rejuvenate depleted, infertile agricultural soils across Australia. By applying crushed basalt, we aim to supply essential nutrients, reverse soil acidification, form fertile clay minerals, and capture carbon dioxide during weathering.

These processes will boost crop growth, improve water and nutrient efficiency, enhance soil quality, and increase carbon sequestration.

On-farm demonstrations will evaluate the logistics, costs, and benefits of using locally sourced, high-quality basalt in various agricultural systems. 

To maximise the uptake of this process, the project will collaborate with farmers, the Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hubs, industry organisations, and a leading carbon market enterprise specialising in enhanced rock weathering.

Drone view of agriculture

What is Enhanced Rock Weathering?

Enhanced weathering speeds up the natural process of rock breakdown to capture CO2 from the atmosphere.

What is Weathering?

When rock is exposed to water, air, and biological activity, it breaks down into smaller particles and dissolved salts. These salts either form solid carbonates in soil or flow into water systems, eventually becoming limestone. This natural process has locked much of Earth’s carbon into rock over billions of years.

Today, CO2 levels are rising due to burning fossil fuels. Enhanced weathering accelerates rock breakdown, allowing CO2 to be captured in years instead of millennia.

How it Works

  • Crushed Rock: Calcium- and magnesium-rich rocks like basalt are crushed to increase reactivity.
  • Applied to Soil: The rock reacts with CO2 from plant roots and microorganisms, especially in warm, wet conditions.
  • Ideal Rock: Basalt is abundant, safe, and weathers quickly, with many quarries in eastern and southern Australia.

Added Benefits

Crushed basalt not only captures CO2 but also:

  • Neutralises soil acidity (like lime).
  • Releases nutrients such as calcium, magnesium, and phosphorus, reducing fertiliser needs.

Enhanced weathering offers a dual benefit for climate action and soil health, making it a promising tool for sustainable agriculture.

Rear view of tractor spreading basalt

Frequently Asked Questions

Where did the idea of rock weathering come from?

Crushed rock has been used to boost crop growth for centuries, with scientific studies on the benefits of applying crushed basalt dating back to the 1960s. The concept of using enhanced rock weathering to capture CO2, however, emerged in the early 2000s. This idea stems from a deeper understanding of how rock weathering has shaped atmospheric CO2 levels and influenced the Earth’s climate over millions of years.

Enhanced rock weathering works on any land, but it’s most effective on agricultural land. Farms are ideal because spreading machinery is accessible, and it boosts both productivity and soil health. Wetter, warmer climates see the best results, and incorporating the rock into soil through tillage could improve effectiveness, though this still needs testing.

The rate of CO2 capture via enhanced weathering varies enormously according to the nature of the crushed rock, climate, soil type and agronomic management. Modelling studies suggest billions of tonnes of CO2 might be removed annually if crushed basalt was applied to croplands globally. With current energy-related emissions at 37 billion tonnes a year, this means enhanced weathering could contribute in a big way to reaching net zero emissions.

In Australia, current modelling by the Leverhulme Centre for Climate Change Mitigation suggests that 2-20 million net tonnes of CO2 might be captured annually by 2050 if basalt was applied to cropland in eastern Australia. Current CO2 emissions from Australian agriculture are about 13 million tonnes per year, so enhanced weathering has the potential to off-set them entirely.

Current estimates of CO2 capture via enhanced weathering range from 0.02 to over 10 tonnes of CO2 per hectare per year. For comparison, the average Australian passenger vehicle emits about 1.81 tonnes of CO2 per 10,000 km.

Carbon capture is measured by testing soil, drainage, and runoff for bicarbonate and carbonate through lab analyses. While this method is costly and complex, simpler approaches are needed for large-scale use. Currently, a mix of soil testing and modelling is used to monitor results in commercial-scale projects.

Applying crushed basalt to soil has unequivocal benefits for soil health and plant growth, as our best soils were formed from weathered basalt. However, to achieve a net positive benefit, the costs of enhanced weathering, in terms of dollars and CO2 emissions, need to be less than the benefits. Costs include mining, crushing, transporting, spreading, brokerage and auditing. The benefits and the costs are still largely unknown, but they will depend on rock type, climate, soil type and cropping system. This project aims to quantify the benefits.

Research on enhanced weathering for CO2 capture started in the late 2000s, and the first field trial in Australia was established in 2018. The number and diversity of research projects on the topic has ballooned since then, with research projects on all continents and in many cropping systems.

Project Partners

People

Dr Paul Nelson

Joint science lead

James Cook University

Dr Binoy Sarkar

Joint science lead

Adelaide University

Karen George

Knowledge broker

TNQ Drought Hub

Emily Harrington

Communications

TNQ Drought Hub

Andrew Pedley

Commercial lead

Carbonaught

Rhys Heffernan

Commercial logistics

Carbonaught

James Lyons

Commercial technical

Carbonaught

Fredrick Holden

North to Central Queensland trial lead

James Cook University

Angela Strain

Project support

James Cook University

Lakshmi Suresh

PhD candidate

Adelaide University 

Sofonyas Dargie Tefera

PhD candidate

James Cook University

Birhanu Iticha Ayanssa

South Queensland to South Australia trial lead

Adelaide University

Dr Lily Reid

Research Assistant and Laboratory Analyst

Adelaide University

Agricultural Reference Panel

The Agricultural Reference Panel is made up of representatives from Grains Research and Development Corporation, Hort Innovation, Sugar Research Australia, and Meat and Livestock Australia.