Liquid Gold, Part 2

Two women with a shared inter­est in Haiti have used their engi­neer­ing skills to develop toi­lets that recy­cle wastes back into fer­til­izer for grow­ing crops.

The toi­lets store human poop, then it is moved to a com­post pile where the waste breaks down for a cou­ple of years. After com­post­ing has killed the pathogens in the waste, the poop can then be used as fer­til­izer for farming.

The inno­va­tion is great way to help small farm­ers and gar­den­ers afford to raise food to feed them­selves. The price of buy­ing fer­til­izer is beyond what most Haitians can afford.

From CNN, this video helps explain how the toi­lets work.

From the accom­pa­ny­ing printed story on SOIL, writer Eliott C. McLaugh­lin gives us some back­ground on how the women became so involved with Haiti.

Brownell, who has an envi­ron­men­tal engi­neer­ing master’s from the Uni­ver­sity of California-Berkeley, first went to Haiti in 1998 to install solar pan­els at a health clinic in Le Borgne. The pan­els didn’t arrive for two months.

I was hang­ing around with not really any project to do, and I really felt like the com­mu­nity took me in, took care of me, even though I didn’t really have much to offer them at that point,” Kramer said.

She stud­ied Cre­ole and prac­ticed cro­chet­ing, cook­ing and wash­ing clothes by hand. The Haitians made fun of her inep­ti­tude at the lat­ter task, Brownell said, so she spent time “try­ing to per­fect my skills” as her instructor’s 2-year-old son, Jef­frey, tod­dled around the washbasin.

Brownell even­tu­ally fin­ished the solar panel project and returned to school at the Rochester Insti­tute of Tech­nol­ogy in New York. When she went back to Haiti two years later, she learned that Jef­frey had died of diar­rhea and dehy­dra­tion — a death Brownell calls “totally pre­ventable” if Jef­frey had sim­ply had access to clean water and safe place to use the bathroom.

This was some­thing that really touched my heart as a way for me to use engi­neer­ing to make that con­nec­tion with the social aspect of help­ing peo­ple to live their lives bet­ter,” Brownell said.

Kramer, who stud­ied “nitro­gen cycles” while earn­ing her doc­tor­ate at Stan­ford Uni­ver­sity, is a human rights observer first drawn to Haiti’s polit­i­cal move­ments. She met Brownell at a Mex­i­can restau­rant in Berke­ley in 2005 and quickly found com­mon threads in their interests.

Even with the all of these acute human rights vio­la­tions that were hap­pen­ing in Haiti at the time,” explained Kramer, “the most preva­lent human rights abuse is really poverty and the fact that peo­ple didn’t have access to their basic needs like food, san­i­ta­tion and water.”



This article is from Poverty News Blog: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/EOch/~3/3VcGoGe4V68/liquid-gold-part-2.html




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