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PhoenixRising
Knowflake

Posts: 2686
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Registered: May 2011

posted August 02, 2022 08:56 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for PhoenixRising     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Hope you are keeping the rivers of your body
as described in the bible especially pee, golden

In America , peeing on trees is banned. But we all know everyone pees in the Ocean . I swear I didn't yesterday no matter how bad it was lol.

Hope the laws are relaxed lol


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http://futurism.com/the-byte/urine-feeding-world-climate-change
An increase in water shortages and greenhouse gas emissions is a serious enough climate problem that scientists are willing to go to any lengths to save the world. One trick in our bioagricultural arsenal? Re-using human pee, they say.


Enter human micturate, which contains all of the above. Julia Cavicchi from the United States Rich Earth Institute said that urine accounts for about 80 percent of the nitrogen found in wastewater and more than half of the phosphorus. That's a rich resource that ag businesses could use, if urine diversion and collection infrastructure got built out.

Waste Not Want Not
There's some precedent, at least on a small scale. Savvy shoppers can purchase composting toilets at appliance stores, which composts solid human waste into a usable fertilizer. Some gardeners use regular old, homemade urine to increase nutrients and encourage biodiversity.

But that doesn't mean everybody's on board, even though AFP says pilot programs for wastewater collection are relatively popular in the few global communities where they've been implemented.

Marine Legrand an anthropologist at the OCAPI network, said overcoming our squeamishness against pee diversion systems should get easier as water shortages increase and H20 becomes an increasingly valuable global resource.

"We are beginning to understand how precious water is," she told the French wire service. "So it becomes unacceptable to defecate in it."

More on climate change: Hooray! The Great Pacific Garbage Patch Has Become a Thriving Ecosystem, Scientists Say
No, we're not talking about a Bear Grylls LARP club. Instead, a group of scientists told national French news service AFP today that human urine may be a way to better fertilize large-scale agricultural produce than current methods farmers use. Plants need nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium to grow and produce fruit — but modern chemical versions of these fertilizers increase greenhouse gases and make waterways inhabitable.

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