Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

The urine revolution: how recycling pee could help to save the world

#1
C C Offline
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-00338-6

EXCERPT: On Gotland, the largest island in Sweden, fresh water is scarce. At the same time, residents are battling dangerous amounts of pollution from agriculture and sewer systems that causes harmful algal blooms in the surrounding Baltic Sea. These can kill fish and make people ill.

To help solve this set of environmental challenges, the island is pinning its hopes on a single, unlikely substance that connects them: human urine.

Starting in 2021, a team of researchers began collaborating with a local company that rents out portable toilets. The goal is to collect more than 70,000 litres of urine over 3 years from waterless urinals and specialized toilets at several locations during the booming summer tourist season. The team is from the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) in Uppsala, which has spun off a company called Sanitation360. Using a process that the researchers developed, they are drying the urine into concrete-like chunks that they hammer into a powder and press into fertilizer pellets that fit into standard farming equipment. A local farmer uses the fertilizer to grow barley that will go to a brewery to make ale — which, after consumption, could enter the cycle all over again.

The researchers aim to take urine reuse “beyond concept and into practice” on a large scale, says Prithvi Simha, a chemical-process engineer at the SLU and Sanitation360’s chief technology officer. The aim is to provide a model that regions around the world could follow. “The ambition is that everyone, everywhere, does this practice.”

The Gotland project is part of a wave of similar efforts worldwide to separate urine from the rest of sewage and to recycle it into products such as fertilizer. That practice, known as urine diversion, is being studied by groups in the United States, Australia, Switzerland, Ethiopia and South Africa, among other places.

[...] Urine used to be a valuable commodity. In the past, some societies used it for fertilizing crops, tanning leather, washing clothes and producing gunpowder. Then, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the modern model of centralized sewage management arose in England and spread worldwide, ultimately leading to what has been called urine blindness... (MORE - missing details)
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Article "Our urine is worth its weight in gold,” says researcher C C 0 13 Yesterday 10:11 PM
Last Post: C C
  Article Plastic experts say recycling is a scam. Should we even do it anymore? C C 1 124 Feb 25, 2024 04:30 AM
Last Post: Syne
  Eating too much protein makes pee a pollutant + Deadly soil bacterium now bides in US C C 0 93 Jul 31, 2022 10:36 PM
Last Post: C C
  Why does science news suck so much? + Pee is the answer to fertilizer shortages C C 0 69 Jun 19, 2022 11:02 PM
Last Post: C C
  The weird reason dolphins drink each other’s pee C C 1 91 Jun 16, 2022 03:56 AM
Last Post: Yazata
  Smolin's "Einstein's Unfinished Revolution" interviews (philosophy of science) C C 1 361 Jun 13, 2019 01:03 AM
Last Post: Syne
  LED bulbs trigger urban farming revolution? C C 1 622 Mar 23, 2015 06:21 AM
Last Post: stryder



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)