Could Recycled Urine Make Sustainable Fertilizer? - podcast episode cover

Could Recycled Urine Make Sustainable Fertilizer?

Jul 30, 20184 min
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Episode description

Sports stadiums have a lot of grass that needs to be fertilized, and a lot of urine to dispose of. Learn how researchers are working to solve both problems at once in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff from How Stuff Works. Hey, brain Stuff, Lauren vocal bam here. Have you ever just tossed a nice pair of shoes after slogging around in the mud all day at a festival, or sent a rug or piece of upholstered furniture to the dump because a beloved mammal in your household, be it dog, cat, or baby, made an impressively unfixable mess of it using only their bodily fluids. We throw valuable things away all the time because they're disgusting and we don't know what else to

do with them. But one research team at the University of Florida is taking a hard look at how we deal with something that's definitely valuable but also essentially gross our p as humans were understandably reluctant to spend a lot of time fiddling with our own waste products. After all our bodies through with it. It smells bad and it could potentially make a sick We are done there, take it away. But just because we're not particularly keen on hanging out with our p doesn't mean it couldn't

save the world. Old urine is full of nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, the same stuff we mine out of the ground and air to make the fertilizers that we grow our food with. We spoke with University of Florida Associate Professor Trevor Boyer. He said the paradigm shift will be in recognizing that wastewater has a lot of valuable products contained within it. What we'd like to do is recover those valuable products and put them to a beneficial use.

In most parts of the world, with municipal plumbing, urine gets flushed to the wastewater treatment plant, along with everything else that goes down the drain or toilet, biodegradable material, assorted cleaning chemicals, and nutrients that are great for making plants grow, but which can cause algae and rivers and lakes to explode and choke up waterways. The wastewater treatment plant removes as much of this negative stuff as possible

so that it doesn't pollute the environment. Boyer said, the problem is wastewater is pretty useless as a coming gold stream, but if you could separate it out, you'd be able to recover drinking water, fertilizer, TiAl energy, and even metals like gold and silver. The key to mining our waste for these treasures would be in separating the waste streams at the source. At this point, that is difficult to do in our homes, where plumbing and appliances are set

to dump dish SuDS and urine down the same pipe. However, Boyer's team realized it would be a lot easier at a giant football stadium where nobody's doing laundry but a lot of people are urinating, and right around the corner from the lab there just happens to be a football field with more than an acre of turf grass in need of fertilization, affectionately known as the swamp. The University of Florida football stadium seats nine fans during seven home

games each year. A thesis written by Boyer's student Bryce sink Graph calculated how many times each person would use the bathroom during one event and how much nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium could be harvested from that urine. They concluded that in one football season, Gator fans would produce more than enough nutrients to fertilize the field for that season. Boyer said, at us point, nobody in the US is

capturing urine on site. And saving it in storage tanks to use as fertilizer, and he says that the easiest way to accomplish that would be to install special waterless urinals in the men's bathrooms, which are already being used in this country as water saving devices. After that, the urine could be piped to storage tanks under the stadium and held while chemistry did its magic changing the chemical composition of the urine into a form of nitrogen usable

on grass. Although mining our waste products for valuable nutrients may not be easy to implement overnight, Lawyer says it's important to look at the costs and benefits of it and how we might accomplish it. He said, the big question is how do we make our society more sustainable. The answer might hinge on our ability to change the way that we think about our own p Today's episode was written by Jesslyin Shields and produced by Tyler Clang. For more on this and lots of other Golden topics,

visit our home planet, how Stuff Works dot com. M

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