So this becomes a long list of questions. Biochar in and of itself will not pay the bills. So where does your money come from? What else do you need to produce to biochar? What can be done to improve quality at low cost or to add value to the process? What is your end goal product?
First a quick understanding of what biochar is. It is basically
carbon black(aka charcoal) from which all volatiles have been removed by boiling them off in an oxygen free environment for use in some other process. Original material size, how fast it is heated or cooled and other things control pore size in the carbon. For it to have the "bio" component then it must be mixed with manure or other nutrient sources to charge it with both life and nutrients. This process takes time as well as another material sources that you do not have showing in what you posted. Part of this can be the
ash from the wood you burned for fuel to run this process. But likely you need a large scale animal feeding close at hand. If you have this great. But it may be you will need to drop the bio and just sell char which is about the lowest value product you can have to sell as it has almost no value.
So how do you pay for it? One suggestion for smaller scale operation I am going to suggest might include a power generation station with
wood gas powered generators. Set up so you had some steady generation with fuel storage so you could spool up for peak demand power just a couple of times a week with say 1/3 of your horsepower going your steady state and the rest going to peak power which brings in way more money all be it for just a few hours a week.
What might an ideal system look like. A large bunker storage system being preheated with your waste heat both to preheat and also to dry the moisture out that will interfere with the out gassing process. From there say half your wood product into a rotatory kiln steady state and half into the fuel to do the charring. Output is wood gas, char, ash and possibly CO2 for a
greenhouse or ag booster and of
course you will have an air pollution stream to destroy or neutralize too. This gives you char but it isn't bio yet.
From there you need to charge the char. So how. One portion of it can be the minerals etc in the ash. But you need life and other nutrient sources to do the charging. Now ideally if you are bringing the manure in you would like to use part of your waste heat to bring it up into the 140 to 150 degree range long
enough to sterilize it of seeds and of biologically harmful bacterial like fecal coliform. Now you might be sending the char out to be mixed with
feed and bedding in an animal operation. Likely another third of your wood would go that way to be part of the end component.
So what do you want to produce and what resources do you have to produce them?