Holon Ecosystem Consultants

Sewage Sludge and The HEAP Trap

Sewage Sludge and The HEAP Trap
Folke Gunther, April 12, 2008

I was refraining from this, since I don’t think it is an item really belonging to the TP list, but now we are here.

1. Urine and faeces are excellent plant food. The reason we don’t use them directly is mostly cultural for the urine, I guess, but for faeces it is really an adaptive behaviour. Burning or charring cold be a good idea for faeces. The charring might make it sterile, and the non-gaseous nutrients, as phosphorus, would be returned to land, for a future production of new food. A large pat of the faeces is indigestible cellulose, why it could be a good thing to char it. The urine, which normally is sterile at the production site, could enrich charcoal very well.

2. Currently, the westernized wastewater behaviour is base on the MIFSLA (Mix First and Separate Later) philosophy This results in a mixture of high nutrient – high pathogen – high toxic – high water content mixture that is almost impossible to do something sensible with. Commonly, it is thrown away into the nearest lake or sea, where the harm it does is not immediately evident. On the other hand, avoiding the MIFSLA with a source-separating toilet is really easy, if you don’t live on the 21st floor and is forced to use the system, either you want it or not.

3. Living in dense communities (e.g. towns or cities) put another invisible restriction on you: As you use the MIFSLA system, you put the used nutrients on a smaller area than the food production area. It is like filling a glass of beer, when the glass is full, he leakage will equal the import. Normally, you stop the beer-filling process then, but you can not stop eating. It will end up in a steady state, which I call the HEAP trap.
I will add a ppt, trying to explain the HEAP effect and its cultural background.

YS
FG

Folke Günther
Kollegievägen 19
224 73 Lund, Sweden
home/office: +46 46 14 14 29
cell: 0709 710306 skype: folkegun
Homepage:
blog: http://folkegunther.blogspot.com/
folke@holon.se


Carbon sequestration for everybody: decrease atmospheric carbon dioxide, earn money and improve the soil

Carbon sequestration for everybody: decrease atmospheric carbon dioxide, earn money and improve the soil
Folke Gunther, Submitted to Energy and Environment, 2007-03-27

Summary:
The easiest way to sequester atmospheric carbon dioxide is to convert plant biomass into charcoal
and bury it in agricultural land. Doing this will open a new way for farmers and laymen to earn
money (from carbon sequestration funds) and improve land fertility. It is also a way to avoid
nutrient loss from land to sea.March 27, 2007

See attached


Carbon dioxide, deciding for our future

Carbon dioxide, deciding for our future
Folke Günther, Holon Ecosystem Consultants, Lund, Sweden, February 26, 2008

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Download the file - carbseq-JAK080119.ppt
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I am also trying to describe the benefits of buried charcoal to counteract the ‘carbon dioxide cloud’ (see my blog), why I am not the least surprised of the reaction of ignorance on he issue. I have been around here in Sweden, trying to lift the mental fog, and have been met with the same surprised skepticism (..if that is so good, why have nobody done it before?)
However, seen from the other side, Lester Brown is quite right. Diminishing the carbon dioxide emissions by 80% to 2020 is just about right (to abot 1 Gt/year). But it must be combined with a massive sequestration (to about 2 Gt annually) ,thus creating a net diminishing of the ‘carbon cloud’ by about 1 Gt per year . For further details, see my blog.

Download the ppt- presentation that seems to be rather clarifying. The drawback is that if takes about one hour to convince a person with it.
FG
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Folke Günther
Kollegievägen 19
224 73 Lund, Sweden
home/office: +46 46 14 14 29
cell: 0709 710306 skype: folkegun
Homepage: http://www.holon.se/folke
blog: http://folkegunther.blogspot.com/
folke@holon.se

Also by Folke Gunther, "Carbon sequestration for everybody: decrease atmospheric carbon dioxide, earn money and improve the soil," March 27, 2007, attached.


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