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Flush Toilets Called 'Environmental Disaster'
CNSNews.com ^ | 6/12/03 | Marc Morano

Posted on 06/12/2003 2:27:25 AM PDT by kattracks

CNSNews.com) - Forget the convenience and sanitation of the flush toilet that industrialized nations have enjoyed for most of the past century.

A growing number of environmentalists are now advocating the expanded use of compost or dry toilets worldwide to combat what they see as an international water crisis.

Proponents of dry toilets, set to convene at the first annual international Dry Toilet 2003 conference in Tampere, Finland, August 20-23, warn of "environmental disaster" if developing nations aspire to flush toilets so prevalent in the industrialized world.

Critics of the upcoming conference say the widespread use of dry toilets in the developing world is nothing more than a "celebration of primitivism" and call the flush toilet the "greatest public health advance in the modern era."

A waterless dry toilet, which generally costs about $2,000, collects human urine and feces and requires emptying by humans on a regular basis. Advocates claim the resulting matter can then be composted and used as fertilizer for food crops.

Larry Warnberg, a featured speaker at the conference, said China and other developing world nations cannot aspire to mimic the U.S. and Europe's reliance on modern flush toilets and the resultant sewage infrastructure.

"That is a wrong turn, and it will just be an environmental disaster. The same is true in Brazil and Africa. There are better choices," Warnberg told CNSNews.com. Warnberg, who will speak to the conference about "Reducing Regulatory Barriers to Composting Toilets," also markets manuals on how to build a do-it-yourself dry toilet.

Warnberg calls his toilet designs S.C.A.T., for Solar Composting Advanced Toilet.

Warnberg laments the widespread use of flush toilets in the industrialized nations of the U.S. and Europe, and he does not want to see the flush toilet adopted by the developing nations in Africa and South America.

"I think it is a mistake to inflict that convenience on a developing county and cost without realizing what the consequences are," Warnberg added.

'Celebration of primitivism'

But critics bristle at the notion that the developing world cannot aspire to the standards of the industrialized world.

"The dry or compost toilet might suit those who wish to drop out of highly developed industrial society, but to advocate them as a solution for developing countries is totally unacceptable and represents little more than a celebration of primitivism," said Ceri Dingle of the British-based charitable education group Worldwrite, which focuses on development issues and sponsors international student exchange programs.

"Thirteen percent of Africans have a sewage connection; that is, a flushing toilet leading to a sewage system, while for North America, the figure is 100 percent and Europe 92 percent," said Dingle. "This is what the developing world aspires to, not make do and mend."

Dingle's group sponsored a campaign on June 7 that included a march by "volunteers from developing countries who want their desire for piped water, flushing loos (toilets) and modern facilities taken seriously."

"The preoccupation with dry toilets is also an anti-human prejudice based on complete panics and irrational fears about planetary water shortages," Dingle added.

Dennis Avery, director of global food issues for the Hudson Institute, agreed with Dingle and was blunt in his defense of the modern flush toilet.

"It's one of the greatest public health advances in the modern era. It's not only convenient, but it is also safer" Avery told CNSNews.com. Avery said the public benefits from the lower incidence of diseases like cholera and typhoid since the widespread use of modern flush toilets and sewage treatment systems.

The flush toilet is not even responsible for significant water usage, according to Avery.

"You can't solve the water problem by taking care of something that is only 5 to 10 percent of the usage," Avery explained. Agricultural use of water accounts for about 70 percent of worldwide water usage, and industry accounts for about 23 percent, according to Avery.

'A matter of education'

Dry toilet advocates claim the devices have advantages but concede there is the issue of routine emptying of excrement from the toilets.

Warnberg's website explains that the dry toilets need to be emptied at 6- to 12-month intervals, "depending on loading," and his design includes the use of earthworms to "provide mixing and aeration."

Warnberg concedes the emptying procedures may make some people squeamish. "It takes more responsibility than a flush toilet, there is no getting around it. Some systems are easier to use than others. It's largely a matter of education," Warnberg said.

But one past user of a dry toilet chronicled his negative experiences in an essay published on this website called "The Trouble With Composting Toilets." The essay, written by Dave Keenan, details his problems with insects and odors that his dry toilet produced in his home.

After having decided that "Thomas Crapper's flush toilet was a fiendish invention," Keenan bought a dry toilet and initially "basked in the warm glow of having done the right thing for the environment" before encountering a problem.

"No matter what I tried over the years, there were always times when one could not lift the lid without several flies lifting off and heading for the kitchen," Keenan wrote.

"Even if I was to be convinced that there was little health danger from flies coming out of the toilet and landing on food, e.g. drosophila (fruit flies) go straight for the fruit bowl, how would I convince my guests that it was ok?" Keenan added.

After four years of living with the dry toilet, Keenan gave up and installed a flush toilet in his home.

"So, from my experience, I cannot recommend composting toilets to anyone, unless they have a serious water shortage, and they live in a non-urban area, and they locate it outside their insect-screened house envelope (on a verandah would be fine)," he wrote.

'Dangerous, dangerous, dangerous'

Another purported benefit of dry toilets is the ability to use the composted excrement for fertilizing human food crops.

"A proper dry toilet system with the recycling of the urine and the feces as a compost product, brings more productivity to crops and improves the land quality," Tittiina Repka, conference secretary of the upcoming Dry Toilet conference, told CNSNews.com.

Repka believes cultural taboos in many parts of the world will have to be changed for people to accept using their feces and urine as fertilizer for food crops.

"People seem to think that human [manure] is something really dirty and should not go into any kind of food circulation systems," Repka said.

But not everyone sees the use of composted human feces on food as a panacea.

"It's dangerous, dangerous, dangerous. You are talking about all kinds of bacterial issues; human manure has human pathogens in it." Avery countered.

Despite claims by advocates of dry toilets that excrement is safe for use as fertilizer if it's properly composted, Avery remained skeptical.

"In labs, under ideal conditions, human manure can be safely disinfected. But manure in the hands of average people out there day after day, time after time, you are taking about enormous risk," Avery said.

"Can you imagine a block full of homes, each of them dumping their wastes in their backyard this way; the odor, the disgust, the public health risk?" Avery asked.

Dingle of Worldwrite does not see the need to even contemplate using your homegrown feces for fertilizer.

"Since chemical fertilizers have massively increased the productivity of commercialized agriculture, there is no evidence to suggest we even need to concern ourselves with preserving and using human waste since we have developed much healthier alternatives," Dingle said.

Avery predicted that dry toilets would ultimately go down the drain.

"If you didn't have to handle [composted feces], if you didn't have to put this on your food crops, if you didn't have to accept the odors and the filth and the disgust, maybe it then it would sell," Avery said.

See Related Article:
Introduction of the Flush Toilet Deplored at Earth Summit
(Aug. 20, 2002)

E-mail a news tip to Marc Morano.

Send a Letter to the Editor about this article.




TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: environment; toilet; water
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To: kattracks
When up in the mountains outside of Seattle last year, we watched a large truck suck up the contents of the cesspool at a park rest station. In large letters on the side of the tank truck:

"We're number one in the number two business"

Then, when boating in the islands in Puget Sound, we saw the boating honey wagon named Pfecal Phish,
With the sign, "We take crap from anyone"

Them folks out there have a sense of humor.

81 posted on 06/12/2003 8:21:38 AM PDT by aShepard
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To: kattracks
A growing number of environmentalists are now advocating the expanded use of compost or dry toilets worldwide to combat what they see as an international water crisis.

These guys have obviously NOT traveled overseas very much!

82 posted on 06/12/2003 8:22:17 AM PDT by cinFLA
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To: RogueIsland
Ummm, there's a reason that outhouses were built outside the home, dude.

Anyone else see the History Channel program on the history of toilets?

83 posted on 06/12/2003 8:26:09 AM PDT by cinFLA
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To: kattracks; marsh2; dixiechick2000; Mama_Bear; doug from upland; WolfsView; Issaquahking; amom; ...
Rights, farms, environment ping.

Let me know if you wish to be added or removed from this list.

84 posted on 06/12/2003 8:32:33 AM PDT by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: kattracks
"It's dangerous, dangerous, dangerous. You are talking about all kinds of bacterial issues; human manure has human pathogens in it." Avery countered.

Yes, it certainly is dangerous. I have lived in two countries now where the use of "night-soil" as fertilizer is common. It's hard enough on the natives, who are more or less accustomed to the immune system challenge that regular ingestion of human pathogens constitutes. It's sheer death - I mean literally - on foreigners for whom many of these pathogens are new.

Of course, if you don't mind washing all your fruits and vegetables in bleach-water, it isn't a big problem, but you'd better not miss anything.

Nor is the problem restricted to "bacterial." Unicellular and multicellular parasites and viruses are also in this toxic brew. And this breezy "properly prepared" qualification covers a multitude of sins - you do get sick and the enviro know-it-alls retreat to a "well, the compost wasn't properly prepared" defense, which is fine if it isn't you running a 103 degree fever and puking your guts out...

85 posted on 06/12/2003 8:32:40 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: kattracks
we should just let it run into the streets like some 3rd world countries do.
86 posted on 06/12/2003 8:35:23 AM PDT by bedolido
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To: kattracks
I'm just going to bring one of these with me wherever I go.... ;^)


87 posted on 06/12/2003 8:44:00 AM PDT by rightwingreligiousfanatic (Caution: Wet Floor....(Tagline is being sanitized for your protection))
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To: kattracks
http://www.thecanteen.com/crapper.jpg
88 posted on 06/12/2003 8:52:47 AM PDT by Stand_Up
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To: farmfriend
BTTT!!!!!!
89 posted on 06/12/2003 9:06:33 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: kattracks
I visited an island off the coast of Honduras twice on mission trips and many of the houses there were built out over the water and the toilets were simply holes over the ocean water.. makes me really look forward to going to the beach this weekend.......


Being splashed by fish beneath you while you go potty is kinda weird but I guess it might be fun for guys who like "target practice"
90 posted on 06/12/2003 9:11:52 AM PDT by honeygrl
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To: kattracks
A waterless dry toilet, which generally costs about $2,000, collects human urine and feces and requires emptying by humans on a regular basis. Advocates claim the resulting matter can then be composted and used as fertilizer for food crops.

Then we can be just like the 3rd worlders! Progress!

I would hate to live next door to a person composting their own crap...it would be worse than living next to a pig farm.

91 posted on 06/12/2003 9:12:20 AM PDT by hattend
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To: MineralMan
I put a 3-gallon tank on my Toto 1.7 gal toilet. It will now flush anything smaller than a cat.

You owe me a new computer screen and keyboard...coffee everywhere!

92 posted on 06/12/2003 9:22:36 AM PDT by hattend
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To: kattracks
Advocates claim the resulting matter can then be composted and used as fertilizer for food crops.

What a great way to spread SARS. I'll bet Santa Cruz county CA is the first county to require all housing convert to composting toilets.
93 posted on 06/12/2003 9:23:46 AM PDT by hedgetrimmer
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To: The Wizard
Yup, I have the 1.6 gal in my house (brand name Sterling) and they work just as well as the old style.

There is a cheap and easy way to increase tank capacity if need be. The overflow tube is 1" PVC on mine. If I had to, I could glue a PVC coupler onto the tube and readjust the float. I could make the tank 3-gallon if I wanted, but it works fine the way it is. Now, enough of this toilet talk. You can't say Free Republic doesn't cover all the bases. :)

94 posted on 06/12/2003 9:25:54 AM PDT by FlyVet
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To: kattracks
I'd pi$$ in the sink, but it's full of dirty dishes.
95 posted on 06/12/2003 9:27:04 AM PDT by Manic_Episode
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To: B Knotts
"It's dangerous, dangerous, dangerous. You are talking about all kinds of bacterial issues; human manure has human pathogens in it." Avery countered

Every time something like this comes up, I become more convinced that the Enviro-nutjobs just want to reduce the human population by any means necessary.

Introducing a whole lot of human pathogens into the food chain is one good way to kill a whole lot of people on-the-cheap. If you want to know the biggest reason life exectancy in the industrialized world is twenty years longer than it is in the third world, you need look no farther than your bathroom. Clean drinking water and the isolation of human waste are more than half the battle.

Having all those human pathogens lying around are a sure way to increase human illness and premature death. But if you know in you heart that there are too many people on the Earth, those are good things. Of course the elite will be protected by having proper facilities, filtered water, and servants to wash and prep the food. But what would we do without our betters.

96 posted on 06/12/2003 9:28:51 AM PDT by gridlock (I know from first hand experience the pleasures of ameobic dysentery and explosive diarrhoea.)
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To: kattracks
Apparently the nice people using this article have forgotten where cholera.

These dumbasses come from a place where disease is rare and generally not deadly. They have lost sight of what it can do in places where sanitation is not available -- and now they're trying to make it worse.

Dumbasses.

97 posted on 06/12/2003 9:31:49 AM PDT by r9etb
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To: kattracks
Is "Friends of Cholera" one of the sponsors of this conference?

-Eric

98 posted on 06/12/2003 9:32:30 AM PDT by E Rocc
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To: nutmeg
read later bump
99 posted on 06/12/2003 9:33:12 AM PDT by nutmeg
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To: Manic_Episode
"I'd pi$$ in the sink, but it's full of dirty dishes. "

Well, if they are already dirty, what could it hurt really? :)
100 posted on 06/12/2003 9:53:39 AM PDT by honeygrl
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