A Black male model
Woman hands
A chair
A Black male model
Woman hands
A chair
A black female model
A female model
A black female model
A female model

LongStraw Carbon

LongStraw Carbon

LongStraw Carbon

Earth first engineering

At LongStraw,
we don't merely produce biochar;
we democratise it.

Straws of LongStraw

Straws of LongStraw

Straws of LongStraw

Carbon Removal

Nature already knows how to draw down carbon, we just amplify it. Through pyrolysis, we lock carbon in stable biochar for centuries, turning atmospheric Carbon Dioxide into a soil asset. It's not just removal; it's quietly returning to soil, where it lingers for generations.

The Farmer Story

For India’s farmers, climate change brings uncertainty, to soil, to seasons, to survival. Biochar offers more than resilience: it improves yields, lowers input costs, enriches the land, and opens pathways to new income. In their hands, waste becomes value, and stewardship becomes opportunity.

Soil Conditioning

Exhausted soils don’t feed nations. Biochar restores microbial life, retains nutrients, and improves water holding, reducing the need for chemical inputs. Healthy soils are our climate insurance and food security backbone.

Agrarian Waste

Over 200 million tonnes of agricultural waste are generated in India each year. Rather than burn it and emit Carbon Dioxide or leave it unattended and emit Methane, we convert it. Biomass becomes biochar unlocking rural energy, reducing pollution, and creating circular economies.

Decarbonisation

Decarbonisation isn’t limited to smokestacks and energy grids, it extends to the materials we build with, the products we use daily. Biochar enters this equation quietly: as a low-carbon additive in construction, a natural binder in incense, a purifier in cosmetics, a stabiliser in fragrances. From rural kilns to urban shelves, it enables cleaner inputs, circular design, and low-emission alternatives across sectors

Carbon Removal

Nature already knows how to draw down carbon, we just amplify it. Through pyrolysis, we lock carbon in stable biochar for centuries, turning atmospheric Carbon Dioxide into a soil asset. It's not just removal; it's quietly returning to soil, where it lingers for generations.

The Farmer Story

For India’s farmers, climate change brings uncertainty, to soil, to seasons, to survival. Biochar offers more than resilience: it improves yields, lowers input costs, enriches the land, and opens pathways to new income. In their hands, waste becomes value, and stewardship becomes opportunity.

Soil Conditioning

Exhausted soils don’t feed nations. Biochar restores microbial life, retains nutrients, and improves water holding, reducing the need for chemical inputs. Healthy soils are our climate insurance and food security backbone.

Agrarian Waste

Over 200 million tonnes of agricultural waste are generated in India each year. Rather than burn it and emit Carbon Dioxide or leave it unattended and emit Methane, we convert it. Biomass becomes biochar unlocking rural energy, reducing pollution, and creating circular economies.

Decarbonisation

Decarbonisation isn’t limited to smokestacks and energy grids, it extends to the materials we build with, the products we use daily. Biochar enters this equation quietly: as a low-carbon additive in construction, a natural binder in incense, a purifier in cosmetics, a stabiliser in fragrances. From rural kilns to urban shelves, it enables cleaner inputs, circular design, and low-emission alternatives across sectors

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