Trimplants 
Trimplants Wholesale Nursery has worked with Low Carbon Devon's
Dr Thomas Murphy to develop the functionality of Biochar, a compost supplement made from local waste materials, a product which enables increased carbon sequestration in the soil.
Trimplants Wholesale Garden Nursery, based in Combe Raleigh, Honiton, are wholesale growers of hardy nursery stock and young plants. They supply growers locally in Devon and throughout the UK. Having supplied plants for green walls, they were interested in developing this side of their business further.
Trimplants were one of the only nurseries which were able to supply the size and type of plants for the Low Carbon Devon greenwall research being carried out by Dr Thomas Murphy. This limited market highlighted the potential opportunity for plant growers such as Trimplants to supply plants for living wall projects and develop an understanding of their optimisation, design and supply chain.
What were the challenges?
  • Peat-based compost will be banned in the UK in 2024 requiring the development of new alternatives.
  • Trimplants wanted to understand the suitability of different plant species for green walls and of potentially growing native flora.
  • Trimplants wanted to reduce their impact on the local environment and also to develop low carbon innovations and products which might be more widely applicable to the horticultural sector.
Dr Thomas Murphy, working alongside the team at Trimplants, developed and tested the Biochar product as a peat-free compost alternative, and the results have enabled Trimplants to market the sale of biochar towards green infrastructure providers who want to maximise the thermal performance and plant health benefits of their installations for achieving carbon net zero.
The product will also allow Trimplants to further lower their carbon emissions and improve their peat-free growing methods for producing healthy resilient plants. One of the ways the new product might achieve this is by regulating soil moisture, retaining more moisture in the soil and reducing the demand for water in the summer months. Biochar can sequester carbon for hundreds of years and also increase microbial networks in depleted soil, linking valuable nutrients to plant roots.
What was the outcome?
  • Biochar is now being sold in local nurseries and community shops, allowing other growers in the region to reduce their reliance on peat-based products.
  • The hedge cuttings now used to make biochar at Trimplants, would traditionally have been burnt by local farmers on a bonfire. Not only has this meant a reduction in carbon output but the brash has been used to create a useful product. There is also far less CO2 released from using a retort and the pyrolysis process. Any methane is burnt off during the process in an enclosed burner.
  • A biochar awareness campaign sharing the research and various trial results has led to increased local interest in green walls. Local gardeners have bought starter packs and have started experimenting with biochar in their gardens and on allotments and therefore sequestering carbon. Many are reporting