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posted by cmn32480 on Wednesday November 04 2015, @01:58AM   Printer-friendly
from the poop-power dept.

Biogas from human waste, safely obtained under controlled circumstances using innovative technologies, is a potential fuel source great enough in theory to generate electricity for up to 138 million households - the number of households in Indonesia, Brazil, and Ethiopia combined.

A report today from UN University's Canadian-based Institute for Water, Environment and Health estimates that biogas potentially available from human waste worldwide would have a value of up to US$ 9.5 billion in natural gas equivalent. And the residue, dried and charred, could produce 2 million tonnes of charcoal-equivalent fuel, curbing the destruction of trees.

Finally, experts say, the large energy value would prove small relative to that of the global health and environmental benefits that would accrue from the safe treatment of human waste in low-resource settings.

http://phys.org/news/2015-11-vast-energy-human-university.html

[Video]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=807RtubRyF0


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by hankwang on Wednesday November 04 2015, @06:13AM

    by hankwang (100) on Wednesday November 04 2015, @06:13AM (#258299) Homepage

    If you claim (or suggest so) that this won't pay off, you should support it by numbers. How much infrastructure do you actually need per unit of energy production?

    Also, you may not need to add new infrastructure that would otherwise not be built. If a sewage treatment plant needs to be upgraded anyway, you could replace it by a biogas plant.

    TFA actually states in the summary that sewage discharge in open water without any treatment is a major health issue in developing countries. Turning sewage into something that can be sold makes it economically feasible to build sewage treatment plants.

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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by hemocyanin on Wednesday November 04 2015, @06:21AM

    by hemocyanin (186) on Wednesday November 04 2015, @06:21AM (#258302) Journal

    Well then make it a health issue and deal with that, but don't feed us BS about what an amazing energy source this would be, because it isn't when it is so widely distributed that the extra 1.9% in usable gas you'd get by collecting it all, would be consumed by the vastly greater amount of energy obviously involved in collecting it. Seriously, who is going to drive 200 miles out into the middle of the rain forest to collect the poo of disparate bands of tribal folk living there and think that is somehow energy conserving?

    • (Score: 2) by hankwang on Wednesday November 04 2015, @05:14PM

      by hankwang (100) on Wednesday November 04 2015, @05:14PM (#258426) Homepage

      Title of TFA:

      WASTE TO WEALTH: Sustainable Wastewater Management in Uganda.

      • (Score: 2) by hemocyanin on Wednesday November 04 2015, @08:18PM

        by hemocyanin (186) on Wednesday November 04 2015, @08:18PM (#258491) Journal

        Then why mention the fact that IF we collected worldwide poo production, we could generate gas for 3 countries? That statistic is stupid because we'd have to spend the gas of 10 countries to get there.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday November 04 2015, @01:21PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday November 04 2015, @01:21PM (#258351)

    This UN(?) outfit is making the proposal, they are the one that must come up with numbers, convincing numbers instead of some vague aggregates.