Archive for the 'Everything Else!' Category

Composting Toilet Environmental Benefits - #3

Read on for our final note on the environmental benefits of composting toilets!

Finished compost from a composting toilet

Environmental Benefit 3 - Nutrients are Recycled, Not Wasted
Did you know that over 90% of the waste we produce is actually water?  When the water is removed, and salts are oxidized, only about 3% of the original waste is left.  When this small 3% is properly decomposed, valuable nutrients are leftover, creating a fertilizer that is ideal for plants, trees, and shrubs.  By flushing our waste down the drain, we waste an enormous amount of water simply to transport the waste to another location where those valuable nutrients will be disposed of, instead of recycled back to nature.  A composting toilet, on the other hand is a completely self-sufficient system that does not waste water and uses very little energy.

The primary function of any composting toilet is to first evaporate all the water, leaving behind the very small amount of solid matter.  In a properly functioning composting toilet, this solid matter need not be seen or dealt with directly by the homeowner until it is completely processed (decomposed), at which point it will look like nothing more than inoffensive garden soil.  This compost can then be added to your flower garden, trees, or shrubs, where it will provide excellent growth benefits for those plants.

As anyone can see, composting toilets make a lot of sense when compared to their traditional, water-wasting counterparts.  So if you are someone who is concerned about the environment, or who simply wants to save money on your water bill, and if you need to replace a toilet in the near future, it might be time to give composting toilets a little further consideration and research.  Today’s modern systems are clean and sleek, completely odorless, and very easy to install and maintain.  By installing a composting toilet, you’ll save money in the long run, and you can rest easy knowing that you’re doing something really great for the environment, too.

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Composting Toilet Environmental Benefits - #2

Eco-friendly composting toilets have a huge number of benefits for the environment.  Today we’ll explore another way that these unique fixtures make a positive impact on the world around us.

Water Conservation

Environmental Benefit 2 - Use Less Water
Since many composting toilet systems are waterless, and since about 25% of the average American home’s water consumption is used to flush toilets, the potential water savings from composting toilets are huge.  As much as 80 to 90 gallons of water per day, or approximately 32,000 gallons per year, can be saved in a U.S. household simply by installing composting toilets.  When freshwater is saved, this also means that energy is saved-the energy that would otherwise go into wastewater treatment plants where wastewater is made clean again.

Follow-up tomorrow for our final benefits of these great products!

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The Poop Question: What Happens After You Flush?

It might be something you’ve never considered, or it might be a question you’ve never had the guts to ask.  Either way, it’s one of life’s little curiosities: what happens to our waste after we flush the toilet?  Where does it go?  Many of us may be aware that cities and municipalities in the United States run wastewater treatment plants where sewage is processed, but few of us have any real understanding of what these facilities do.  In this article, we are going to shed some light on the mystery of where all our poop goes after the toilet is flushed.

The goal of any wastewater treatment plant is the same: to change contaminated water into water that is safe to be discharged back into the environment.  Wastewater entering a sewage treatment plant may be contaminated with physical debris such as cans or bottles, chemical pollutants like household cleaners, and biological contaminants, including the pathogens from our waste.  All these contaminants must be removed before the water is considered clean and non-toxic.  To this end, wastewater will go through various processes usually referred to as primary, secondary, and tertiary treatment.

Primary treatment can be thought of as the “settling” stage.  Wastewater is placed in very large sedimentation tanks where sludge settles to the bottom and grease and oils rise up to the top.  The sludge is removed so that it can be separately processed, and the grease and oil are skimmed away.  The end result is a homogenous liquid that moves into the secondary stage of treatment.

Secondary treatment removes the biological contaminants that are polluting the water, or at least reduces them to an acceptable level.  Quite simply, this is done by exposing the water to various types of bacteria that literally eat the pathogens out of the water.  There are different types of processes to accomplish this, but the majority of wastewater treatment plants use aerobic processing.  This means that the bacteria need oxygen in order to break down the pathogens in the water.  In aerobic processing, the water will need to be aerated so as to provide sufficient oxygen to the bacteria.

Tertiary treatment can mean a number of different things, and so any process that takes place after secondary treatment is generally considered tertiary treatment.  Some examples of tertiary treatments might include filtering the water to further remove any suspended matter.  Additional reduction of biological or chemical contaminants would also be a type of tertiary process.  If wastewater has a high level of nutrients such as nitrogen or phosphorus, then it may need to undergo tertiary treatment to remove the excess nutrients so as to prevent algal blooms once the water is released back into the environment.  Excessive algae growth on water is a problem because it deoxygenizes the water to the point that fish and other wildlife can’t survive.

You may be wondering what happens to the sludge that was removed in the first step of the process.  Sludge is decomposed by bacteria, similar to the bacteria that remove pathogens from wastewater in secondary treatment.  This decomposition can be either aerobic or anaerobic, but the purpose is always the same: to reduce the volume of matter and to reduce the number of pathogens in the material that could cause disease.  Disposal of the finished sludge varies.  Traditionally, most wastewater treatment plants would truck the material to a landfill and dispose of it.  However, today some plants are beginning to sell the material to companies that turn it into fertilizers that can be applied to farmland.

So that’s the answer to the poop question!  Wastewater treatment isn’t something that many of us care to consider, but it is a very necessary process.  In developing countries where wastewater treatment isn’t regulated, there are devastating effects to the environment and public health caused by exposure to contaminated water.  In short, those of us living in developed countries can be thankful for the wastewater treatment plants that process our waste on a daily basis.

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