Home > Myths & Facts > Is It Time to Kill Off the Flush Toilet?
   
   
   
     
       
Mon, 17 Nov 2008 01:57:00

Is It Time to Kill Off the Flush Toilet?

Flush Toilet
We're dumping up to 22 liters of drinkable water every day, one three- to six-liter flush at a time.
Don Duncan / Macau




To flush or not to flush. That was the question that designers and ecologists were asking each other this week as hundreds of people — who spend a lot of time thinking about these things — convened for the annual World Toilet Summit and Expo in Macau.

The World Toilet Summit and Expo is like the Star Trek Convention of the waste management and sanitation world. Toilets on show run the gamut from a cardboard box complete with a hole, plastic bag and pouch of waterless magic pathogen-busting dust ($50), to a high-tech 'uber-toilet,' featuring an in-seat warmer/cooler, male and female water jets, an in-bowl light (why? why?) and a USB port so you can connect your mp3 player for your soothing tune of choice ($1,200).

But figuring out how to wean the world off the flush handle took center stage. Though the common flush toilet has remained largely the same since it's invention in 1596, the world it inhabits has changed drastically. City populations have mushroomed, sewers have become overburdened and water has become scarcer. Now, the flushing loo — that human innovation that lifted the industrialized world out of its own dirt, cholera and dysentery — is quickly becoming one of the more egregious instruments of waste in this time of acutely finite resources. "The world can't sustain this toilet," says Jack Sim, the founder of the World Toilet Organization — the other WTO — an organization that advocates for sustainable sanitation solutions for all. "This 'flush and forget' attitude creates a new problem which we have to revisit."

If you are, as Sim's said, one of the millions who tends to 'flush and forget' on a regular basis, chances are you're dumping up to 22 liters of drinkable water every day, one three- to six-liter flush at a time. But the problem doesn't stop there. What follows — the 'forget' part of the toilet experience — is the long and costly process of sanitizing the water that was clean before you answered nature's call. In the developed world, the flush toilet is our only direct link to the enormous — and exorbitant — engineering feat that is the modern urban sanitation system: the sewers, filtration plants, water treatment facilities, and finally, treated water disposal channels that send the scrubbed water into our rivers and lakes.

Using so much water per flush unnecessarily increases the volume of our waste and the cost of its transportation and treatment, ecologists say. If you don't put waste in water in the first place, then you don't have to spend money to remove it at the back end. The process also leaves a huge carbon footprint, says Rose George, author of The Big Necessity: The Unmentionable World of Human Waste and Why it Matters. In the UK, she says, "the sewage system uses as much energy as what the largest coal fire station in the [country] produces" — about 28.8 million tones of carbon dioxide a year.

But the fundamental shift in how we think about our waste, and by extension, dispose of it, needs to be to stop mixing liquids and solids, says the WTO's Sim. "The human body is designed to separate solids from liquid waste," and we should follow suit, he says. By separating fecal matter from urine at the source in what's called a "urine diversion toilet," a wider ecological system of waste disposal becomes possible. Solids can be composted for fertilizer and harvested for methane gas. Urine can be used to produce phosphorous and nitrogen and clean, drinkable water. (The question is, will people bring themselves to drink it?)

Ecological sanitation, as this call to arms is known in toilet circles, is already up and running in many spots around the world. In rural China, 15.4 million homes convert methane into power from what normally went down the pit behind the house. Household waste is stored in a state-subsidized "digester," a kind of metal stomach that breaks down the matter and releases methane gas which is trapped for reuse. In the French city of Lille, a small fleet of ten buses are also using methane, gleaned from the city's poop. And in some Indian villages, simple latrines have been built that separate waste and use it to produce compost and fertilizer at a per capita cost infinitesimally lower than any waste management budget in the West.

In a reversal of the traditional one-way innovation highway — from the West to the rest of the world — many of the best ideas in sanitation are coming from the developing world. And for now, the gap between these initiatives and the large-scale urban sanitary solutions of tomorrow is being filled by inventors and dreamers like Jack Sim and others who gathered this week in Macau. Among their larger visions for collective waste disposal and treatment on display was a network of low-water toilets that separated solids from liquids and assigned them to reservoirs shared by an apartment building or block of houses. Those resevoirs would then produce fertilizer, soil conditioner and energy producing methane — and dramatically cut the cost to the public of waste disposal.

But for many people, this is just hot air. "We have the luxury of flushing the toilet and just seeing it disappear," says George. The industry is stalled not only by that convenience, but by taboo. "People are uncomfortable talking about their own waste." It may have been quite some time since relating the adventures of your most recent bowel movement has constituted acceptable fodder for conversation, but nevertheless, says George, our 'bodily products' have to come back into the conversation somehow, if we are ever going to flush away the flush.


Source: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1857113,00.html

5 / 5 (4 Votes)


   
 

           
         
         
         
         
         
       
Your name:
Email (will not be published):
Subject:
Your Comment:


 
           
         

 

         
           
       

Bees Always Have a Safe Landing

Find out why bees never crash land, and...

Conspiracy Theory Global Warming with...

with Jesse Ventura

Fat in Japan? You're breaking the law.

As the health care debate rages in the...

Scientists hail a thoughtful future...

During the transmission two people are...

Einstein's theory of General Relativity...

Is Einstein finally wrong?

Mayan Year 2012 Stirs Apocalypse...

A significant time period for the Mayas...

Look to the past for new solutions

Inventors could have even anticipated...

The world's first electric car... built...

Could this be the world's first...

Russian scientists test perpetual...

Some common ideas recur repeatedly in...

Will Russia Be Mining The Moon By The...

Helium-3 is the new “black gold”

Why Water Won't Improve Your MPG: A PM...

More than once, Popular Mechanics...

Eight Years of Bush: It’s Over at Last

George Bush admitted having made many...

Scientists Welcome Obama’s Words

The latest on President Obama, the new...

The Greatest Inventions Nikola Tesla...

Inventor Nikola Tesla invented the...

Opportunities vs. mistakes

In order to be successful at anything,...

Living in a Funhouse Run by Morons

Climate Change Fraud

         
           
           

    Notice article's source. Non-commercial publication only. The published articles do not necessary represent FreeEnergy.ca point of view.
     
     

  AddThis Social Bookmark Button      
 

 

 

     
   

 

     
   

Solar Power
In Energy Innovation, Everything New Is Old Again In Energy Innovation,...

Most Alternative Fuel Technologies Have Roots in...

     
 

Wind Power
WindTamer brings turbines to campus WindTamer brings...

WindTamer Corp. recently began selling models of...

     
 

Hydro / Ocean
Pure water for Haiti, Afghanistan: Just Add Bacteria Pure water for Haiti,...

Researchers isolated a set of bacterium to do the...

     
   

Thermal Energy
Cool It and Warm It With a Chameleon Roof Cool It and Warm It With...

Cool in Summer Is Good, Cold in Winter Is Not

     
   

Waste
Harnessing waste heat to produce electricity Harnessing waste heat to...

A laptop generating a little too much waste heat

     
           
   

 

     
   

     
   

 

     
           
   

Hamilton: Albertan oil veteran pumping up 'nitrogen grid' Hamilton: Albertan oil...

The underground pipeline would eliminate the need...

NASA sets sights on inflatable space stations NASA sets sights on...

No more floating in a tin can

High-Tech Energy "Oasis" to Bloom in the Desert? High-Tech Energy...

An illustration of the planned Sahara Forest...

Human-caused global warming easily overwhelms much-hyped "cold snap" Human-caused global...

Hottest January in UAH satellite record

Pentagon Dreams of Flying Car Pentagon Dreams of...

Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research Projects...

Who Needs the Grid? Who Needs the Grid?

A new fuel-cell technology promises to...

Panasonic Plans To Market Storage Battery For Home Use In 2011 Panasonic Plans To...

Home storage battery

50 days to save the world? I might listen to the doomsayers if they weren't such ludicrous hypocrites 50 days to save the...

Prince Charles used the Queen's Flight to travel...

A revolutionary invention hits the streets A revolutionary...

New intelligent bike wheel transforms use

India's climate change proposals gets nod at Copenhagen summit India's climate change...

India is not here to renegotiate Kyoto agreement.

A Breakthrough for Hydrogen Storage? A Breakthrough for...

Technology from the Soviet space program adapted...

Automower Solar Hybrid: That's One Smart Lawn-Mowing Robot! Automower Solar Hybrid:...

$2,000 price tag may sound steep, the Automower...

Children's invention to detect forest fires Children's invention to...

A network of solar powered CCTV cameras mounted...

The solar-powered school on stilts The solar-powered school...

The Forest School features up-cycled, recycled...

Oyster - the world's largest working hydro-electric wave energy device Oyster - the world's...

The Oyster wave energy device was launched this...

Simpler, cheaper, biodegradable plastic without using fossil fuels Simpler, cheaper,...

Biodegradable cups made from corn at Chubby's...

Mobile Water Purification Offers Hope To Disaster-Hit Regions Mobile Water...

A Safe and Natural Coagulant

Scottish invention promises power revolution Scottish invention...

Dr Markus Mueller, above, of the University of...

CO2 Recycler Creates Fuel From Carbon Dioxide CO2 Recycler Creates...

A prototype of the machine, which was invented by...

Energy Saving: Much Cheaper Than Building Power Plants! Energy Saving: Much...

Early in this century we had a nice life based on...

Ridgeblade® Wind Power Generator Wins Dutch Postcode Lottery Green Award Ridgeblade® Wind Power...

Wind Generator is not as simple as it looks

Commack students get $8,100 grant to make energy-saving device Commack students get...

We will invent a device that reduces standby...

Flapping Wind Turbine Inspired by Bumble Bee Wings Flapping Wind Turbine...

The xBEE has a19-foot wingspan and swoops in a...

Betting on a Metal-Air Battery Breakthrough Betting on a Metal-Air...

A government-funded start-up claims it can make...

WaveRoller Uses Swinging Door for Underwater Wave Energy WaveRoller Uses Swinging...

Wave energy

     
   

 

     
           
           
   

 

     
           
   

Free Energy  Videos

     
   

 

     

 


 

  Site  

      2004-2009 ©  FreeEnergy.ca

  Preview Chanel Preview Chanel   AddThis Feed Button
Powered by: PHPCow.com