@DoomsdaysCW Wee really has a lot of N and K in it!! LOL.
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/3812/1/tidaker_p_090928.pdf?origin=publication_detail
"New Rule:
No number 1s in the bowl.
Please pee in a bucket and put it out of a morning on the curb for collection.
Remember, this is for our farmers."
South Korea collects and processes Urine, it is very useful for chemical industry as well as for farmers, big but poop is just as useful.
In my just past ww2 childhood, both urine and poop were put on the muckpile along with pig and chicken manure.
The toilet was a bucket in a brick shithouse, located at the end of the small part of the garden. Poop was covered with sawdust or peat depending on what we had available.
After rotting it fed a huge vegetable garden.
@DoomsdaysCW seems there's been quite a lot of this sort of thing, and studies into it, going on
https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/9/2456
Interception is enormously better — makes the urine and the poop more handle-able. BUT unlike the “wash it away” system it has to be handled.
SOIL, aka EkoLay in Haiti, is one of the longest running “container sanitation “ operations I know of, check out their website!
The Seattle area does extraction at the end plant and we ship mostly phosphorus east to… orchards, forest re establishment? Engineering and social problem, that was.
Deer Island in Boston might do the same. @DoomsdaysCW @Gorfram
For a while a professional pathologist in Portland OR was managing his households fecal waste to some very high standard. Wasn’t easy. Very informative.
So, the issue with the Deer Island facility is #PFAS. We need to be more careful about what we flush down the toilet, and also start using firefighting foams without #ForeverChemicals, @clew .
Our sewage often becomes fertilizer. Problem is, it's tainted with PFAS
Barbara Moran
March 30, 2023
https://www.wbur.org/news/2023/03/30/boston-massachusetts-pfas-forever-chemicals-sludge-deer-island
Yes, there’s PFAS in sewage; it’s surprisingly unclear whether there’s any cycle of nutrients that isn’t already PFAS contaminated. We just look harder at sewage; we don’t know that there’s an alternative.
Doubly excellent reason to drop PFAS use, ofc.