Garbage

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
Waste is a terrible thing to mind...but it makes MONEY!
Without a landfill, Edmonton had to come up with a new way to manage their garbage, and so now all garbage is torn open, recyclables recovered, and the organic side of the waste is sent to be mixed with the biosolids from our sewer facility. The sludge is then mixed in a giant tumbler for roughly 3 days to get some of the moisture out, and the resulting mix is composted, and sold to garden centres and landscapers, etc.
Certain portion of GVRD trash has been sorted for recycling for quite sometime. There is good money in trash and now with the addition of "carbon credits" to be made if cities wise up and start being bio producers as well as consumers. I xcan see how this "green revolution" is going to employ a lot of people in the near future.
A machine to 'eliminate' garbage is a foolish concept.
Not at all. There is indeed a "machine" that turns trash into a carbonized product which does actually make a fertilizer so good that test crops having triple the yield and a 30% increase in moisture retention.

A young lady in NSW came up with the concept and won a hefty prize. I'll try to dig up a link.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
117,858
14,424
113
Low Earth Orbit
Waste is a terrible thing to mind...but it makes MONEY!Certain portion of GVRD trash has been sorted for recycling for quite sometime. There is good money in trash and now with the addition of "carbon credits" to be made if cities wise up and start being bio producers as well as consumers. I xcan see how this "green revolution" is going to employ a lot of people in the near future.
Not at all. There is indeed a "machine" that turns trash into a carbonized product which does actually make a fertilizer so good that test crops having triple the yield and a 30% increase in moisture retention.

A young lady in NSW came up with the concept and won a hefty prize. I'll try to dig up a link.
Bio-char I think it's called.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
117,858
14,424
113
Low Earth Orbit
Turning Organic Waste into Biochar Might Save the World from Global Warming



Turning Garbage into Biochar
© public domain


We now have the technology to turn global waste into a multifunctional "band-aid" for the planet; in effect, turning garbage into gold. Biochar is a new, very porous type of charcoal created by heating organic wastes to high temperatures. The waste can be just about anything—wood, corn husks, manure—materials that would break down on their own eventually.

How is Biochar Made?

To make biochar, organic waste is placed in a special machine that heats the materials to temperatures as high as 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit, a process known as "pyrolysis". After a few hours of exposure to intense heat, the trash is transformed into charcoal-like pellets that farmers can use as fertilizer. Even the gasses given off during pyrolysis of organic matter can be harnessed to make fuel.

What's So Great About Biochar? Everything.

In addition to creating fertilizer and fuel, this panacea pellet is a natural carbon-sink. Forests that are slashed and burned, or even cut own and left to naturally decompose, release large amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere; a greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming. Carbon drawn from the atmosphere can be locked into this natural charcoal, and then stored in the ground, where it is unable to contribute to atmospheric carbon dioxide. As an added bonus, the presence of biochar in the ground also improves soil and water quality.