FERTILIZER MADE FROM HUMAN WASTE RETURNS TO JAPAN AS PRICES SOAR

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Fri 30 June 2023:

It’s inexpensive, recycled, and has a long history: “shimogoe,” or “fertilizer from a person’s bottom,” is gaining popularity in Japan as the price of chemical alternatives rises due to the Ukraine war.

However, the advent of sewage systems and treatment facilities, as well as chemical fertilisers, saw it fall out of fashion.

Around a decade ago, Japanese treatment facilities pondered if they could rekindle interest in avoiding sewage sludge disposal, which is both costly and potentially harmful to the environment.

However, enthusiasm was limited until Russia’s invasion of Ukraine pushed up the price of chemical fertilizers.

That has been a bonanza for a facility in northern Japan’s Tome, where sales of shimogoe were up 160 per cent year-on-year by March 2023.

For the first time since the city began producing the fertiliser in 2010, it has sold out.

The demand is easy to explain, said facility vice president Toshiaki Kato. “Our fertiliser is popular because it is cheap, and it is helping farmers cut soaring costs,” he told AFP.

“It is also good for the environment.”

Made of a combination of treated sewage sludge from septic tanks and human waste from cesspits, the fertiliser goes for 160 yen ($1.10) per 15 kg.

That’s about a tenth of the price of products made from imported raw materials.

In southwestern Japan’s Saga too, officials report sales are up two to three times.

And dozens of tour groups from municipalities elsewhere in the country have visited, eager to replicate their programme.

Historic origins

Shimogoe was a key fertiliser in Japan’s pre-modern Edo era, said Arata Kobayashi, a fertiliser specialist who has written journal articles on the subject.

In the early 18th century, the one million residents of Tokyo — then called Edo — “produced” an estimated 500,000 tonnes of fertiliser a year.

It was big business, involving gatherers, transporters and farmers, “and all of them benefited from the recycling system,” Kobayashi said.

They “didn’t create a recycling system on purpose… it was the result of everyone pursuing profit.”

Japan’s government has encouraged the revival, citing environmental benefits and concerns about food security since Russia’s invasion.

The Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries hopes to double animal manure and human waste use by 2030, with a goal of them accounting for 40 per cent of all fertiliser use in Japan.

In Miura outside Tokyo, vacuum trucks carrying human waste arrive one after another at a treatment facility.

Water is removed and then bacteria ferment the remaining solids in huge tanks.

Methane produced during the process is burned to supply the facility’s hot water and electricity, and the final product is a soil-like powder that can be spread on fields.

“We produce 500 tonnes of fertiliser annually,” said Kenichi Ryose, facility manager at Miura Biomass Centre.

“This fertiliser is particularly good for leaf vegetables, like cabbage,” he added.

Ryose said “harmful materials like heavy metals are removed from processed sewage sludge before arriving,” at the plant. 

In the United States, there have been recent concerns about the levels of so-called forever chemicals (PFAS) in fertiliser made from sewage.

An environment ministry official said similar concerns had not been reported in Japan, but noted there are no current guidelines for PFAS levels in soil.

“We’re in the process of developing a scientifically reliable way to measure PFAS and studying how to regulate it,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

‘Dirty mud’

The sun is shining as the trucks arrive, and despite the facility’s odour-absorbing machines, a distinct aroma fills the air.

The smell has proved something of a problem, admitted Nobuyoshi Fujiwara, 41, who runs a lettuce farm in Yokosuka, north of Miura.

He started using Shimogoe last year, “because I wanted to cut costs and for the social good” of recycling waste.

But “we can’t use it in fields near houses, because there are complaints about the smell”.

“Also, you have to spread four or five times the volume that you use with regular chemical fertilisers,” he explained.

That’s the case for any type of manure but can be a turnoff for some farmers because it is more work.

He concedes that the fertiliser faces something of a branding issue.

“The Chinese characters that are used for sludge — ‘dirty mud’ — are not great,” he said.

“Even though we produce safe food, I imagine that for those who don’t know much about it, the impressions people have of fertiliser made from human faeces might not be good.”

He doesn’t want to hide his use of the fertiliser though. In fact, he would like to see it publicised. “An official certification system would be helpful to promote our produce,” he said.

SOURCE: INDEPENDENT PRESS AND NEWS AGENCIES

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