It may be counter-intuitive, but the little bits of you and me treated to become biosolids are helping with climate change, phosphorus depletion, and all the while growing great gardens.
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Eugene’s sludge is sweet!!! Hallelujah! Register Guard-Cottage Grove #biosolids odors
Can you use Biosolids (aka composted sewage sludge) on veggies?
- More nutritious and protected from urban soil metals because of Biosolids!
- Healthier soil microbes.
- Local, sustainable, renewable alternative to chemical fertilizers.
- We are soo lucky to have access to this great soil amendment!
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Sustainability of Biosolids Recycling Confirmed using 20 Year Study #sewage sludge Fact Sheet: http://cals.arizona.edu/pubs/consumer/az1426.pdf
- What Are Biosolids? (includes data - yeah!)
- What are the Biosolids Regulations?
- Land Application of Biosolids in Arizona and in the US
- History of Biosolids Research at the University of Arizona
- Biosolids Research in Arizona: Emerging Issues
- Biosolids Use for Land Reclamation
- Answers to Concerns about the Safety of Biosolids Land Use
- How can we contribute to the safe [use] of biosolids on land?
- Remember
- References and Websites of Interest
- "As the population grows so will the production of biosolids and the need for safer disposal options.
- "Healthy soils contain hundreds of millions of beneficial bacteria and other microorganisms per gram that recycle plant nutrients, and degrade pathogens and organic pollutants.
- "Biosolids are not a significant health threat as long as they are treated, stored, handled, and applied to land following accepted guidelines and regulations.
- "Application of biosolids for nonfood agricultural crop production at this arid southwest site seems to be sustainable with respect to soil chemical entities."
- "The study showed that land application of Class B biosolids had no significant long-term effect on soil pH and CaCO3. However, land application significantly increased soil macro-nutrients (C, N and P). Soil nitrate values in plots that received biosolids or inorganic fertilizer amendments were high indicating the potential for groundwater contamination. In addition, total and available soil P concentrations increased to values above that necessary for plant growth but P values attenuated to background levels at a soil depth of 150 cm. Total metal concentrations attenuated rapidly with increasing soil depth, and were generally similar to values found in control soils at a depth of 150 cm."
- "Overall, the 20 annual land applications showed no long-term adverse effects, and therefore, this study documents that land application of biosolids at this particular site was sustainable throughout the 20-yr period, with respect to soil microbial properties."
- "Data show that land application of ClassB biosolids had no significant long-term effect on indigenous soil microbial numbers including bacteria, actinomycetes, and fungi compared to unamended control plots. Importantly, no bacterial or viral pathogens were detected in soil samples collected from biosolid amended plots in December (10 mo after the last land application) demonstrating that pathogens introduced via Class B biosolids only survived in soil transiently. However, plots that received biosolids had significantly higher microbial activity or potential for microbial transformations, including nitrification, sulfur oxidation, and dehydrogenase activity, than control plots and plots receiving inorganic fertilizers."
- As end-users of numerous household products that contain toxic and hazardous chemicals, limiting the use and disposal of these products into the sewage system will continue to improve the quality of biosolids. What should we do?
- Use no or low phosphate, biodegradable soaps and detergents at manufacturer recommended amounts.
- Do not dump leftover household chemicals such as oil products, pesticides, paints, solvents and medicines down the toilet or sink. Instead, take unused or spent products to local recycling centers.
- Do not use or limit the outdoor use of yard pesticides and avoid chemical spills on driveways, as these activities can contaminate runoff water entering the sewage system.”
Biosolids are Probiotic!??!! Should I eat them??
By probiotic I mean biosolids build beneficial (Good-guy) bacteria in soils!
Based on what?
- University of Arizona 20-year study:
- "Overall, the 20 annual land applications showed no long-term adverse effects, and therefore, this study documents that land application of biosolids at this particular site was sustainable throughout the 20-yr period, with respect to soil microbial properties."
- "... plots that received biosolids had significantly higher microbial activity or potential for microbial transformations, including nitrification, sulfur oxidation, and dehydrogenase activity, than control plots and plots receiving inorganic fertilizers."
- http://cals.arizona.edu/pubs/consumer/az1426.pdf
- Personal interview with Arizona farmer discussing the biosolids-soil-root interactions that take place. The farmer was telling me about the microbes in the biosolids that help the plants' roots better access the nitrogen contained in the biosolids, which means bigger, better, healthier plants.
Added cross-referenced post - 8/25/11
World-wide Phosphorus Crisis, but Biosolids Recycling to the Rescue (at least 1%)
- "Global reserves of phosphorus are running out and, since plants need phosphate to grow, this poses an enormous challenge for global food production in the foreseeable future. A shortage of phosphate could ultimately result in large-scale famine and social-political turmoil. Surprisingly, phosphorus depletion did not seem to be on the political agenda some time ago.
- A key question is whether it will be possible to feed a growing global population in the future. Often it is simply assumed that resources necessary for increased food production will be just as available as they are today. This might not be the case for phosphorus (P) which is a macronutrient indispensable for plant growth, and also irreplaceable.
- In the pre-industrialised era, when there was a much smaller global population, crop production relied on natural phosphorus supplies in the soil, with or without additional supplies from organic manure. Human excreta were also used as input. Increased food production was necessary to feed the growing global population. This became possible from around 1850 onwards, based on the input of artificial fertilisers, which boosted agriculture tremendously. However, since phosphorus is an important component of artificial fertilisers, this also accelerated phosphorus use.Currently we are in a situation in which global food supply has become dependent on continual inputs of phosphate fertiliser to maintain soil fertility. However, phosphate deposits are finite. The problem of phosphorus depletion is further complicated by the fact that, similarly to fossil fuels, the control of phosphorus resources is in the hands of a limited number of countries. Most of the known reserves are in Morocco, the US and China and the latter recently imposed an export tariff on phosphate."
- Link to the website and leaflet to learn more.
- Here is a website that lists the states where phosphorus depleted soils may be present.
THE SOLUTION: Sustainable Use of Phosphorus
The authors of the phosphorus depletion report above "authors stress the need to re-use and recycle phosphorus." They created a list of recommendations that includes recycling human and agricultural organic matter (aka poop, treated sewage sludge, biosolids).
Here's where biosolids recycling comes to the rescue - at least for the approximately 1% of US agriculture that uses biosolids. Because biosolids contain phosphorus, using them to fertilize farms and gardens will replenish your soil without having to further deplete phosphorus mines.
THE CAVEAT: Phosphorus in Moderation
Phosphorus is necessary to grow food in soil, but it is a pollutant in water. Ensuring best management practices, applying at agronomic rates, and preventing agricultural run-off are critical in balancing the critical need to recycle phosphorus with the environmental degradation that occurs with too much phosphorus.
Mining the phosphorus from animal and human wastes can help (article on mining from sewage). However the cost for this equipment is energy (climate change) intensive and expensive. The return on investment based on current phosphorus pricing probably doesn't pan out for wide-scale mining, especially where phosphorus is not scarce yet.
It's interesting that some soils are rich in phosphorus and phosphorus retained in the soil can keep soils productive for years (Western Farm Press article).
Bottom-line?
We are already seeing the monitoring and controls of phosphorus increasing along with the incentives for recycling and renewable mining.
Let's ensure that the low-energy direct use of biosolids on farms and gardens continues to help this situation!
Support Biosolids Recycling, have your voice heard here: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/biosolids/
http://wdict.net/word/phosphorus/
Many missing major Climate Change issues; focused on contaminant minutia
The current issue of BioCycle offers an eloquent and thought-provocating article by Sally Brown, Research Associate Professor at the University of Washington in Seattle. I've included a few of the great quotes from the article and a link to BioCycle to read more.
"But we aren't talking about streams. The question was about irrigating crops. I told the reporter about a new publication on the safety of reclaimed water put out by the WateReuse Research Federation that places risks into prespective. An agricultural laborer - someone who would be considered a highly exposed person to this synthetic estrogen - in a field irrigated with reclaimed water would need to spend 16,000 years working in the field to get the same exposure to the estrogen as you find in one birth control pill."
"Instead he asked about plant update. The straightforward answer would have been to continue with the comparison, i.e., that plants take up very little if any of these compounds and that they will degrade in soils, and that you would have to eat nothing but those plants (e.g., salads) for decades and decades to get one birth control pill. But instead, I told him about studies we've done showing no plant update and I did talk to him about that one paper out of Toldedo where they had to add chemicals to the water to get concentrations high enough to even see them in plants."
"There is consenus, certainty, within the scientific community on climate change - manmade climage change. For the general public though, more are worried about that part per trillion in reclaimed water than the catastrphic flooding, droughts, and so on."
Read more of Sally's " Keep Talking" ( Subscription required )
BioCycle July 2011, Vol. 52, No. 7, p. 42
Climate Change Connections, Sally Brown
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
CompostNow.org - Hot New Idea Seeks Support!
Visit http://www.compostnow.org/ or Ripple to Support: http://www.rippple.com/request/compost-now-fundraiser-52
CompostNow Campaign from andrewvanover on Vimeo.
Another day, another defense of biosolids. #sewage sludge
Monday, August 22, 2011
Sewage Sludge has Super Powers that Protect Metals from Uptake into Plants!!
VOICE YOUR SUPPORT! http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/biosolids/
Sustainable Carbon, Nitrogen, Phosphorus Cycling: Garden to You to Manure/Sewage Sludge/Biosolids and Back!
Biosolids are also important to the nitrogen and phosphorus cycles; key sources of plant nutrition (high in nitrogen and micro and macro-nutrients). The Earth's phosphorus supplies are diminishing and will be gone in the next 100 years. They retain water so water-soluable nutrients stay in the soils (not running off and polluting local water ways like "hot" synthetic fertilizers). Biosolids are treated to remove pathogens, have been used safely for decades, and their rich properties have a protection effect that keeps metals and other pollutants in soils and not available to plants.
Support Biosolids Recycling, have your voice heard here:http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/biosolids/ Follow me on Twitter @BiosolidsRGreat and Like our Biosolids Buzz page on Facebook!
Food Security and Sustainability with Urban Farming Square Foot Gardens - Sustainability from Sewage Sludge through Succulent Tomatoes
Worried about what's in your food or how it was grown? If you want the job done right, then do it yourself! The move to urban gardening and locally grown sustainable foods is growing fast. Even in urban areas.
My friend Karen just started her own garden was watering it during our recent visit. "Everything just tastes better when it comes from your own garden. And you know whats in it." Karen started her garden with herbs like oregano and thyme, peppers, and tomatoes. She is lucky enough to have an acre of land to plant away.
What about those of us with "normal" Southern California homes (very small back yards) or even our tiny back patio at our condo. There is hope!
My husband used Mel Bartholomew's "All New Square Foot Gardening," as his guide when he created our own little veggie patch. He used Mel's method to install a garden in a 5 foot by 2 foot area, and our garden is already providing some beautiful bounty!
Urban soils are notorious for legacy contaminants from previous activities as well as air deposition of lead from brake pads and other pollution. Add in some really gnarly soils types (clay, rocks, weeds ready to germinate) and you have a depressing urban garden picture.
But gardening in containers or raised beds "lift you above all these concerns." You have a clean slate to start your garden out on the right foot. Give it the best foundation you can.
Another benefit is planting each small area (square foot) at a different time (vary by a week or two) so your fruits and veggies don't ripen all at the same time. Because the square foot areas are big enough for a plant that produces plenty for that time frame, but they are small enough that you can plant several different items or similar items with different timings. There are also several different configurations for square foot gardens. We saw some at the fair that make good use of vertical space as well as horitzontal.
Of course our garden includes biosolids (aka treated sewage sludge) compost in that initial mix. Biosolids comes from all of us, so it contains lots of nitrogen and phosphorus to feed the plants and a complete mix of macro and micro nutrients and even beneficial microbes that do great things in the soil to help the plants. Biosolids have been treated to remove pathogens but have all the other good stuff that is natural to recycle back to the soil and sustainable. Biosolids are local (from your treatment plant), comes from you, is a wonderful alternative to synthetic fertilizer, and is a renewable (which is critical when we are facing running out of all mined sources of phosphorus in 100 years).
Some worry about other unwanted things in biosolids. Modern industrial programs and permits have reduced metals exponentially. One pharmaceutical study found that it would take 50,000 gallons of biosolids to equal one dose of Viagra. Add these factors to the amazing protective properties of biosolids (biosolids has rich organic and inorganic factions that create complex binding) keep unwanted constituents permanently bound and not available to plant uptake. (see other related articles here).
The plants do uptake the nitrogen, phosphorus, and lots of nutrients not available in such a complete form with synthetic or chemical fertilizers.
Then let the Beautiful Bounty Begin!
Biosolids Boy and the Compost Kid and the Secret of the Super Soccer field
Mixing biosolids (treated sewage sludge) compost into native soils as a base on sports fields builds the health of your soils which creates great grass and turf. Biosolids premium soil amendment, cost effective, and a local, renewable, environmentally-friendly product. Slow-release nitrogen feeds turf over a long-time and water quality is protected with biosolids water-holding capacity. Biosolids help create a softer, more spongelike soil that actually helps reduce sports injuries. Biosolids are a great foundation when building a new sports field or top-dressing existing fields. They have a host of micro and macro nutrients, retain water, and can actually remediate contaminants in urban soils with a tremendous protective power that keeps contaminants locked in the soil (not available to plants).
"Present-day sewage sludge is Wicked stuff." Wicked parallel between biosolids and Wicked Witch of the West.
What contaminants lurk in sewage sludge (biosolids) compost? Watch out if you EAT more than 60 pounds per day!!! Wanna see the data?
| One part per trillion (1 ppt) is a proportion equivalent to one-twentieth of a drop of water diluted into an Olympic-size swimming pool. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parts-per_notation |
There is nothing "clean" in our world. Technology has brought us ultra-low detection limits, so we are finding "contaminents" everywhere (chemical and microbial). We have to consider the levels at which they are present. Very very low levels do not pose health risks. The EPA has done the most thorough risk assessment on biosolids (and these other products on the shelves have similar contents - animal products probably have higher levels of steriods and anti-biotics but they probably are not availabe to the plants).
Compost is Not Enough - but Biosolids Compost comes from the Best - You and Me!
Sustainable Carbon, Nitrogen, Phosphorus Cycling: Garden to You to Manure/Sewage Sludge/Biosolids and Back!
Food Security and Sustainability with Urban Farming Square Foot Gardens - Sewage Sludge to Succulent Tomatoes = Sustainability
VOICE YOUR SUPPORT! http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/biosolids/
Amazing Biosolids ... caught on video!!
Just did a quick search and found a few very cool videos that I haven't seen before. They really do a pretty good job at explaining what a great job biosolids do. I love the gravel pit reclamation before and afters. Nothing like pictures and videos to bring life to a subject!
Most of these speak to the municipal side of biosolids, but call your local sewage treatment plant and find out if you can Claim any of your Biosolids for your own Garden! You flushed it and you want it back!
Biosolids an Amazing Renewable Resource (I don't think I would have included this guy or at least change the thumbnail for the video!)
From Nature to Nature - Everything you need to know about Biosolids and Compost (San Francisco)
Watch it Grow - Biosolids Fertilizer
Watch it Grow Using Manufactured Topsoil
GRU Biosolids - I like how they point out that if anyone was going to get sick from biosolids it would be the frontline workers.
City of Santa Rosa Biosolids Program
... and just to keep it light and fun! Mr. Hankey loads a biosolids truck.
Feed your soils, healthy plants, nutritious food, natural alternatives to synthetic fertilizers and pesticides.
Biosolids also acts as soil activators described in this article below by increasing beneficial microbes in the soil while feeding the plants with a long list of beneficial nutrients. The foods and vitamins we ingest every day pass through us and are then processed (to remove pathogens) and become nutrient-packed biosolids ready to restart the "cycle of life."
Using biosolids to fertilize big farms, urban farms, and home gardens gets these valuable microbes and nutrients back into the soil where they can do the most good - increase yields and improve the quality of our gardens and even the taste of our food. And the cycle keeps on going. Renewable and sustainable.
Compare this approach to non-renewable, mined, unsustainable synthetic fertilizers. We can't manufacture what nature has designed. We can't take a vitamin in place of eating whole foods. Synthetic fertilizers are akin to man-made, limited nutrients and Biosolids are equivalent to the whole food. The complete nutrients in biosolids make more nutritious foods and more healthy plants able to fend off disease without pesticides and herbicides that become entrenched and long-lasting in the environment. Ah, sustainability, sweet sustainability!
For those wondering, what about the Other stuff flushed down toilets and sinks that you don't want in your home garden. Good thought. We should all be aware and conscious of what we use in our every day lives can impact the environment, and comes back to us in the long-run. The environment is a never ending cycling that passes through our households. Hopefully, we can do our part to use environmentally-friendly products.
For those of us who add some pharmaceuticals to the environment out of necessity, a recent study at a treatment plant found only two detectable pharms in samples of biosolids. The result was it would take 48,000 gallons of biosolids to equal one dose of Viagra. The presence of pharmaceuticals is very small (one drop in a swimming pool) and plants uptake a minuscule portion of that. USDA and universities have studied these topics for years, and the research continues to ensure safety.
The bottomline is that the nutrients and benefits to plant health from biosolids are nothing short of amazing - especially considering it's local, renewable, and sustainable. Thank you to Pro Soil for their inspiring article!!
http://www.blogger.com/goog_2071936930
http://www.pro-soil.com/blog/bio-brothers/2010/crop-production/wheat/bug-off-soil-activator/
