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Opportunities and Linkages Between Sanitation & Agriculture Cecilia Ruben EcoSanRes Programme Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) SACOSAN-IV Platform Workshop, Sri Lanka, 27 April 2009 partner of
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Publication from EcoSanRes Published by IWA, 2008
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Ecological Sanitation = Productive Sanitation Implies a change in attitude towards safe reuse of nutrients from human excreta and the recovery of treated greywater to the environment Closing the Loop on Sanitation
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Ecosan Community & Agriculture: The Complete Ecosan Household
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Closing the Loop on Sanitation
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Compost from human excreta. Appearance and texture of the final product depends on what is placed in the chamber/pit. (Malawi) Left: mixing composted faeces, urine and sandy soil Right: mixing composted faeces, urine, red soil and leaves
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Ecosan Fertilisers – CREPA-Burkina Faso Birg-koom “liquid fertiliser” Birg-koenga “solid fertiliser” Faeces mixed with ash and stored for 6 months After 1 month’s storage in closed jerry can
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Birg koomUrea
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Linking Sanitation and Agriculture: Challenges and Opportunities Nearly a billion people in 46 countries are malnourished Each day 40,000 die of hunger and hunger-related diseases 75-80% of Africa's farmland is degraded Africa loses 30-60kg nutrients/ha/yr - highest rate in world 2002/03 Sub-Saharan Africa used 8kg fertiliser/ha compared to South America (80kg), North America (98kg), Western Europe (175kg) and East Asia (202kg) Cost of fertiliser in US is ¼ that of land-locked Africa 700 million people in 50 countries eat food from crops irrigated with untreated sewage 3.5 billion people are infected with helminth worm parasites 5,000-6,000 children die every day in the world due to water-borne diseases linked to lack of basic sanitation 60 million DALYs (person-years) are lost from diarrhea per year
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Costs derived from transport, taxes, overheads, finance costs and margins cause fertiliser to cost much more in the poorest land- locked areas of the world such as Africa (IFDC, 2006)
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Trend in global grain prices in USD per ton (World Bank, 2008)
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Diammonium phosphate global bulk price trend to Oct 16 (ICIS, 2008)
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Ammonia global bulk price trend to Oct 16 (ICIS, 2008)
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World trends in fertiliser use (NY Times, 2008)
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undernourished underfertilised undernourished overfertilised overnourished overfertilised Comparison between chemical nitrogen fertiliser used and potential nitrogen fertiliser derived from sanitation systems (SEI, 2005)
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Sub-Saharan Africa Self-Sufficient Fertiliser Supply
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Alternative ways of handling urine diverted from faeces: used directly, disposed of in an evapo-transpiration bed, stored in a tank for later use or evaporated. Winblad & Simpson Hébert, eds. 2004
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Unfertilized maize (left) and urine-fertilized maize (right) (Morgan, Aquamor, Zimbabwe, 2005)
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Maize Trials Using Urine as Fertiliser (Zimbabwe) (Aquamor)
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Action Research - Testing Urine Fertilisation at CREPA-Mali Urine Without urine
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www.ecosanres.org cecilia.ruben@sei.se
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