TY - JOUR
T1 - Separation a la source et valorisation des excretats humains du Grand Paris
T2 - Des filieres emergentes
AU - Legrand, M.
AU - Joveniaux, A.
AU - Arbarotti, A.
AU - De Gouvello, B.
AU - Esculier, F.
AU - Tabuchi, J. P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Assoc. Generale des Hygienistes et Techniciens Municipaux. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/9/20
Y1 - 2021/9/20
N2 - A holistic approach to environmental issues highlights the limits reached by the use of sewers to remove human excreta from inhabited spaces. Megacities, in particular, are today exposed to acute and still unknown challenges Given the major global changes faced by wastewater management systems, such a large concentration of population puts the classical sanitation model under stress. Apart from the frequent overloads of centralised wastewater management systems, there is their deep footprint in terms of energy expenditure, greenhouse gas emissions and continuing frequent pollution of aquatic environments. Yet managed separately, these excreta could be used as fertiliser: their agricultural application would represent a move away from the waste remediation model and an opportunity for mutual benefit between urban and agricultural zones, supplying the latter with lasting, local and nonfossil fertilising materials. Focusing on the case of the Paris conurbation, we provide a crosscutting analysis of the current opportunities for implementing source separation systems in a highly concentrated population centre. More specifically, we examine the technical, organisational and economic obstacles and drivers around the production of fertilisers from human excreta, in particular from urine, under good sanitary and agronomic conditions. We show the build-up of evidence about the limits of the current wastewater management system and the need for a paradigm shift. Nonetheless, pilot projects remain difficult to implement (due to political, sociocultural, economic, regulatory and technical obstacles, which are particularly tough in the case of a megacityl. Despite this, there has been a recent shift in the dynamics, with projects emerging on the margins of urban planning. A key factor in their success is adaptation to different territorial configurations. Backed by individuals and groups with specific priorities, these projects offer a glimpse of the possibility of devising new sociotechnical systems for managing human waste.
AB - A holistic approach to environmental issues highlights the limits reached by the use of sewers to remove human excreta from inhabited spaces. Megacities, in particular, are today exposed to acute and still unknown challenges Given the major global changes faced by wastewater management systems, such a large concentration of population puts the classical sanitation model under stress. Apart from the frequent overloads of centralised wastewater management systems, there is their deep footprint in terms of energy expenditure, greenhouse gas emissions and continuing frequent pollution of aquatic environments. Yet managed separately, these excreta could be used as fertiliser: their agricultural application would represent a move away from the waste remediation model and an opportunity for mutual benefit between urban and agricultural zones, supplying the latter with lasting, local and nonfossil fertilising materials. Focusing on the case of the Paris conurbation, we provide a crosscutting analysis of the current opportunities for implementing source separation systems in a highly concentrated population centre. More specifically, we examine the technical, organisational and economic obstacles and drivers around the production of fertilisers from human excreta, in particular from urine, under good sanitary and agronomic conditions. We show the build-up of evidence about the limits of the current wastewater management system and the need for a paradigm shift. Nonetheless, pilot projects remain difficult to implement (due to political, sociocultural, economic, regulatory and technical obstacles, which are particularly tough in the case of a megacityl. Despite this, there has been a recent shift in the dynamics, with projects emerging on the margins of urban planning. A key factor in their success is adaptation to different territorial configurations. Backed by individuals and groups with specific priorities, these projects offer a glimpse of the possibility of devising new sociotechnical systems for managing human waste.
KW - Dry toilets
KW - Human excreta
KW - Paris
KW - Sanitation
KW - Source separation
KW - Territorial configuration
KW - Urine
KW - valorization
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85131011328
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85131011328
SN - 0299-7258
VL - 166
SP - 103
EP - 118
JO - Techniques - Sciences - Methodes
JF - Techniques - Sciences - Methodes
IS - 9
ER -