Title: General overview about ecosan
1General overview about ecosan
- Christine Werner, Heinz-Peter Mang, Florian
Klingel, Patrick Bracken - Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische
Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH - ecological sanitation programme, Division 44
environment and infrastructure
01-03-2005, IESNI 2nd workshop, Pune, India
2Content
- Introduction to ecosan
- ecosan technologies
- ecosan pilot projects
- GTZ-ecosan programme
- urban ecosan systems
3shortcomings of conventional watercarriage
sanitation
Introduction to ecosan
- The idea, that human excreta are wastes with no
useful purpose is a modern misconception. It has
led to the develop-ment of so-called drop and
store or flush and forget sanitation
solutions, where precious drinking water is used
to transport excreta into the water cycle
misusing our rivers, oceans and aquifers as a
sink for untreated waste.
4shortcomings of conventional watercarriage
sanitation
Introduction to ecosan
- Unsatisfactory purification or uncontrolled
discharge of more than 90 of wastewater
worldwide - Severe water pollution, unbearable health risks
- Consumption of precious water for transport of
waste - High investment, energy, operating and
maintenance costs - Frequent subsidization of prosperous areas and
neglect of poorer settlements - Loss of valuable nutrients and trace elements
contained in excrements due to discharge into
waters - Problems with contaminated sewage sludge in
combined, central systems - Linear end-of-pipe technology
5shortcomings of conventional drop and store
sanitation
Introduction to ecosan
6excreta are a valuable resource
Introduction to ecosan
- farmers around the world yearly require 135 Mio
tons of mineral fertiliser for their crops, while
at the same time conventional sanitation dumps 50
Mio tons of fertiliser equivalents from so called
wastewater flows into our water bodies -
nutrients with a market value of around 15
Billion US dollars.
7principles of ecosan
Introduction to ecosan
8closing the loop between sanitation and
agriculture
Introduction to ecosan
rainwater harvesting
restoring soil fertility
food
agricultural use
organic waste
greywater
faeces
urine
treatment / hygienization
water reuse
no waste disposal in water bodies
9advantages of ecological sanitation
Introduction to ecosan
- Improvement of health by minimizing the
introduction of pathogens from human excrements
into the water cycle - Promotion of safe, hygienic recovery and use of
nutrients, organics, trace elements, water and
energy - Preservation of soil fertility, Improvement of
agricultural productivity - Conservation of resources
- Preference for modular, decentralised
partial-flow systems for more appropriate,
cost-efficient solutions - Promotion of a holistic, interdisciplinary
approach - Material flow cycle instead of disposal
10Introduction to ecosan
eco-sanitation concepts and strategies
- eco-sanitation
- is not a specific technology, but a new
philosophy - based on an eco-system-oriented view
of material flows - of dealing with what is
presently regarded as waste and wastewater for
disposal - applies the basic natural principal of closing
the loop by using modern and safe sanitation and
reuse technologies - opens up a wider range of sanitation options
than those currently considered. - Human excreta and domestic used water are not
wastes but are important natural resources!
11ecosan is a cross-sectoral approach
Introduction to ecosan
12composition of household wastewater
Introduction to ecosan
10.000 200.000 l
50 l
500 l
source Otterpohl
Volume Liter / (Personyear)
greywater urine faeces
13fertilizer potential of human excreta
Introduction to ecosan
source Drangert, 1998
14Introduction to ecosan
eco-sanitation concepts and strategies
- To optimise cost efficient, high quality
treatment and recycling options, two principles
are very often being applied in ecosan systems - flow streams with different characteristics, such
as faeces, urine and greywater, are often
collected separately. Rainwater harvesting and
the treatment of organic waste and animal manure
can also be integrated into the concepts. - the unnecessary dilution of the flow streams is
avoided, for example by using dry, low flush or
vacuum transport systems. This minimises the
consumption of valuable drinking water and
produces high valued concentrations of
recyclables.
15phosphate
Introduction to ecosan
source US Geological survey, 2003
- World demand for phosphate fertilizers continues
to expand in relation to increased world
population and food requirements. - For the period 2003-07, world phosphate
consumption is forecasted to increase by 2.6
annually. - Within about 60 years, all reserved phosphate
are expected to be mined. - Future conflicts on the access to phosphate are
likely, due to the limited reserves and the
concentration of significant minable resources in
a very small number of countries.
16WHO guidelines for agricultural use of treated
water
Introduction to ecosan
17agricultural utilisation of nutrients
Introduction to ecosan
One person can provide enough nutrients for200
m2 to 400 m2 agricultural production area,
depending on soil and plant type, but
- a multi-barrier concept is recommended for
securing hygienic safety in the reuse of human
faeces and urine in agriculture
- Awareness raising and education on hygiene and
reuse aspects - Proper pre-treatment (storage, drying,
composting, anaerobic digestion, heating,
filtration, irradiation with UV etc.) - Suitable handling (with security measures)
- Limitation to specific vegetables and field
crops, or to specific vegetation periods,
depending on pre-treatment
- the crops nutrient needs have to be respected (no
over-fertilisation) with respect to crop quality
and environmental concerns
18centralised and decentralized systems
Introduction to ecosan
Partially decentralized
Centralized
Fully decentralized
source Larsen, 2001
- centralized sewer system and treatment
- recovery of nutrients and water e.g. through
reuse of wastewater
- small-scale closed cycles of water and materials
- e.g. separate collection of urine or blackwater
- centralized nutrient processing facility
- centralized greywater sewer system and treatment
19cost comparison ecosan vs. conventional
Introduction to ecosan
Vacuum urine-diversion toilet
Conventional toilet (WC)
Cost
Composting urine diversion toilet
source Berliner Wasserbetriebe
Time (year)
Projected costs for sanitation service for 5000
inhabitants, Germany
20benefits of ecological sanitation
Introduction to ecosan
source www.virtualmuseum.ca
source Johannes Heeb
ecosan-toilets in Bangalore, India
21benefits of ecological sanitation
Introduction to ecosan
- improved soil quality through reuse of organics
- restored soil fertility through nutrient reuse
faeces urine
none
urine
source Petter Jenssen
compost improved soil
source Vinnerås, 2003
untreated soil
after one week without water
22benefits of ecological sanitation
Introduction to ecosan
source Petter Jenssen
- recovery of energy content (covering about 20
of cooking energy needs for a typical family in a
developing country) - energy savings in fertilizer production
wastewater treatment
23overview of ecosan technology-components
ecosan technologies
24examples of urine diverting toilets
ecosan technologies
China
Dubletten, Sweden
Roediger, Germany
Wost-Man, Sweden
? dry/wet faeces with, urine without flush
? dry/wet faeces without, urine with flush
? wet faeces urine with flush
GTZ, Mali
? waterless faeces and urine without flush
25waterless urinals
ecosan technologies
vacuum urinal KfW-building, Germany
Lambertsmühle, Germany
Mon Museum, Sweden
Urimat
Ernst
Keramag
26examples of composting toilets
ecosan technologies
composting toilet, Germany (Berger Biotechnik)
Sweden
27examples of dehydrating toilets
ecosan technologies
rear view of a dehydrating toilet, Mali
school toilet facility, China
two chamber systems
28examples of dehydrating toilets
ecosan technologies
various dehydration systems (with and without
urine separation)
Enviroloo-prefabricated system, South Africa
SolaSan-prefabricated system, South Africa
29vacuum systems
ecosan technologies
elements vacuum toilets, vacuum urinals, vacuum
conductions, pumping station advantages water
saving, concentrated black water collection,
decentralised treatment possible
(anaerobic) manufacturer i.e. Roediger GmbH
30anaerobic treatment with biogas production
ecosan technologies
- small-scale biogas plants
- decentralized treatment of household wastewater
with or without agricultural waste
31ecosan technologies
large scale biogas plants
32membrane technology
ecosan technologies
- Highly effective removal of soluable and
biodegradable materials in wastewater stream - selective permeable membrane (pore sizes lt
bacteria) - treated water recycle potential for non-potable
application - compact, flexible system
33earthworm treatment system
ecosan technologies
34aqua culture
ecosan technologies
- wastewater treatment by aquatic plants and fish
with nutrient recyling by human consumption - offers high quality protein at low cost
- predominantly in Asian countries
- fish production of 1-6 tons/hayear) achieved
35fishfarming with wastewater from ducks, poultry
or pigs husbandry (Asia)
ecosan technologies
source Nils de Pauw
36constructed wetlands
ecosan technologies
- treatment of wastewater or greywater
- effective in the removal of BOD, TSS, pathogen
and nitrogen - effluent can be reused
- aesthetically appealing
source Cemagref
vertical flow
source Comax International Ltd.
Niels De Pauw
horizontal flow
37Constructed wetland with biomass production
ecosan technologies
source EU Fair, 2003
- Combined wastewater treatment and bio-fuel
production from willow plantations (example in
Sweden) - Cost and energy effective
38epuvalisation
ecosan technologies
nutrient recycling (Senegal)
39urine storage
ecosan technologies
Various containers for urine storage Gebers,
Sweden Lambertsmühle, Germany
40agricultural use
ecosan technologies
direct injection of liquid fertiliser
irrigation
urban agriculture
dried faeces - soil amelioration)
composting with organic waste
urban agriculture
41ecosan pilot projects
basic types of ecosan projects
42ecosan pilot projects
eco-settlement Lübeck Flintenbreite, Germany
eco-settlement for 350 people
source Otterwasser GmbH, Germany
43ecosan pilot projects
eco-settlement Lübeck Flintenbreite, Germany
apartments with greywater treatment and
constructed wetlands vacuum station,
sanitization tank and biogas treatment plant for
the collection and treatment of diluted blackwater
44ecosan public toilet centre Bangalore, India
(supported by ACTS, SDC, Uni Oslo and GTZ)
ecosan pilot projects
- Public toilet separate collection of urine,
faeces and anal cleaning water - Co-composting of faeces with paper
Source Johannes Heeb
Source Johannes Heeb
45ecosan pilot projects
public toilet centre Bangalore, India (supported
by ACTS, SDC, Uni Oslo and GTZ)
Current collection- transport-, treatment- and
reuse-system
46New Zealand
ecosan pilot projects
compost toilet (bin)
greywater wasteland
47biogas-program Dhapasi, Nepal
ecosan pilot projects
biogas is used for cooking, organic sludge is
used to fertilise the garden
toilet wastewater and manure is used in a
household biogas plant
48ecosan pilot projects
experimental on-site sanitation in Koulikoro,
Mali (supported by GTZ)
experimental on-site sanitation module consisting
of a urine diverting dehydrating latrine, shower
and greywater garden
Urine diverting concrete slab
Greywater garden
49Egypt (supported by GTZ)
ecosan pilot projects
- large scale field test on soilisation of sewage
sludge using vegetation (IPP Consult)
Soilisation bed with grass
50ecosan pilot projects
integrated natural resources management in
Botswana (supported by IUCN, DED, GTZ)
- Introduction of ecosan systems in three
communities dehydration toilets, urine
separation and fertilization of gardens with urine
urine diversion toilet made out of plastic
Awareness workshop on a village level
51ecosan pilot projects
biogas septic tanks Lesotho (supported by GTZ and
DED)
- 1st step (2002) small bore sewer grid for 8
houses, a biogas-septic tank unit, upflow filter
based on recycled plastic bottles, wetland, 800m²
vegetable and fruit garden, two household
connections for the biogas as full cooking energy
source - 2nd step (2003) field tests of black-, greywater
and urine separation
52ecosan-study and reuse experiments in Havana,
Cuba (supported by GTZ)
ecosan pilot projects
- Study of options for reuse of urine and faeces in
existing urban agriculture in Havana
improved soil quality through reuse of organics
53participatory development of ecosan solutions in
Gibeon and Marienthal, Namibia (supported by GTZ)
ecosan pilot projects
- Information, awareness building, situation and
stakeholder analysis - Participatory development of ecosan concepts
- Pilot and demonstration units (fixed and movable
dehydration toilets with urine diversion)
54Chinese four in one model
ecosan pilot projects
- pig toilet biogas vegetable
- combined with Greenhouse Production
- more than 1,000,000 times in peri-urban areas of
Megacities in Northern China - Use of nutrients, organics, energy and carbon
dioxyde
55ecosan dry toilet promotion in Guangxi-Province,
China (supported by SIDA and Unicef)
ecosan pilot projects
- Large ecosan project in the phase of up-scaling
- 1997, pilot project funded by SIDA/Unicef, 70
ecosan (urine diverting dehydration toilets)
built in pilot village, Dalu Village - 1998, 10.000 urine-diverting toilets were built
in 200 ecosan villages in Guangxi - 2002, 100.000 ecosan toilets in Guangxi
- 2003, 685.000 ecosan toilets in 17 provinces
(Ministry of Public Health) - Factors of success cultural acceptance,
political commitment, technical flexibility, low
cost, income generation, pressure from water
pollution and water scarcity, promotion and
marketing
Photos Sandec, Text Mi Hua
56urine diverting dry toilets Guangxi-Province,
China
ecosan pilot projects
57urine diverting dry toilets Guangxi-Province,
China
ecosan pilot projects
58examples in Guanxi province, China
ecosan pilot projects
Very remote village No water supply, difficult
transport, biogas plants for manure
Public school
59household biogas latrines
ecosan pilot projects
By 2002 11 million households Data Ministry of
Agriculture
60decentralized treatment for municipal sewerage
ecosan pilot projects
DEWATS /LOMWATS Decentralized wastewater
treatment systems Low maintenance wastewater
treatment systems
Biogas Digestors By 2002 115.176 plants Data
Ministry of Agriculture
61ecosan pilot projects
Eco-City, Jiangsu province, China (supported by
GTZ)
- ecosan components to be integrated in the
Changzhou - Yangzhou Eco-City-Programme - Baselinestudy completed, feasibility study planned
Model of eco-planned Golden City
Floriculture
62ecosan pilot projects
KfW office building Palmengarten, Germany
- ecosan concept since 2003
- Greywater recycling
- Rainwater harvesting
- Vacuum wastewater collection
63ecosan pilot projects
GTZ headquarters, main building, Germany
ecosan concept separation, processing and
agricultural reuse of urine (implementation
2004/2005)
urine diversion toilets and waterless urinals
64ecosan pilot projects
GTZ supported ecosan pilot projects around the
world
65urban ecosan concepts
Conventional Wastewater System
66urban ecosan concepts
67urban ecosan concepts
68urban ecosan concepts
69urban ecosan concepts
Residential Area
food faeces urine greywater treated
greywater drinking water
70urban ecosan concepts
71urban ecosan concepts
food faeces urine greywater treated
greywater drinking water
Downtown Area
irrigation of urban green
biogas plant
vacuum sewerage
72urban ecosan concepts