[All] composting sewage

Lanteigne water.lulu at yahoo.ca
Wed Aug 24 13:07:05 EDT 2022


Hi Folk! 
Oil, Gas and Steel all linked to Russian ownership in Canada. (Rosneft, Gazprom and Evraz all link to Enbridge). 
Currently Ontario wants to use Natural Gas to bypass oil.
https://toronto.citynews.ca/video/2022/08/23/ontarios-energy-grid-looking-less-and-less-green/
Enbridge's Russian dealings from 2008 involved Alexander Medvedev, a known KGB agent and supporter of Putin who is on the sanctions list. He was Deputy Chairman of the Management Committee of OAO Gazprom. Plans were to bring Russian LNG to  Quebec and Ontario.
https://www.energir.com/en/about/media/news/gazprom-us-based-subsidiary-and-rabaska-reach-agreement/
I was thinking to bypass the geopolitical mess of these questionable commodities we could bypass the use of metal, water and energy by using compost on site in homes to treat, transport and manage human sewage. 
Using toilet water requires volumes that are predictable. To cut water use dramatically suddenly can disrupt the system too much because  chlorine/chloramine safety levels have to be maintained to reach users to provide safe water.  
We have fast growth happening and the uncertainty of climate change and water shortages along with the geopolitical risks we face and a Covid 19 pandemic that shows up in values in rivers and sewage. My view, we need the controls placed at the municipal level to secure a resilient localized safe drinking water system.  
I am thinking we may need to shift a portion of our residents to 100% composting systems in new homes and retrofits.  We already have a sewage treatment plant plan in place to power itself from the sludge produced. I don’t know how far along that project is right now but to bypass water need and the related infrastructure of, we need composting. 
In retrospect, I see the Lake Erie pipeline concepts and the 30 year old growth plan as a boon for Russians and multinationals. not Canadians.
Susan is working on the good green death systems that processes human bodies pretty quick and organically. How does the same mechanism treat a load of simply human waste? Can the enzymes handle that or is it too acidic?
If a home owner had a composting system using the same mechanism or aspects of it, would there be a vantage in reducing risks of pathogens at source faster? (would it prevent Covid from reaching the rivers)  or does it have economic benefits in terms of generating passive energy to make it more cost efficient for home owners to bypass water for sewage? 
Either way, the power really has to fall to local communities to be the change. Don’t let Ford’s strong mayor nonsense pass. He wants to give mayors the power to stack boards. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/ontario-strong-mayor-bill-beyond-housing-1.6558071
They know community governance is a game changer. They cannot stop us. I know our community. This is the will of the people.  
10 years of Climate Marches in Waterloo Ontario 
  
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10 years of Climate Marches in Waterloo Ontario
 
By Louisette Lanteigne
 

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By the way, Ford’s track record is really bad on the court cases he lost trying to overstep his jurisdictional authority. 
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-government-court-cases-lost-doug-ford-1.6168318
Keep on keeping on folks. 
Lulu 







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