Iowa’s industrial-scale animal agriculture produces 110 billion pounds of manure annually contaminating the water.
#manure #farming #waterpollution #pollution #environment
Iowa’s Manure Deluge Fuels Ris...

Iowa’s industrial-scale animal agriculture produces 110 billion pounds of manure annually contaminating the water.
#manure #farming #waterpollution #pollution #environment
Iowa’s Manure Deluge Fuels Ris...
Getting More From Manure: Denmark Trip Shows Pennsylvanians the Possibilities of Biogas | Agriculture Business & Agritourism News https://www.byteseu.com/1212062/ #Agriculture #AnaerobicDigestion #biogas #Denmark #digestate #Fertilizer #manure #NaturalEnvironment #NaturalGas #NaturalResources #SustainableTechnologies
Digging out the black gold. #Compost #Composting #Manure
A modern day miracle. I found a supply of some really good, aged horse manure yesterday. They have a daily supply of the fresh stuff too and have never used herbicides or pesticides on their paddocks in the 20 years they’ve been there.
Win, win they also have two lovely Shetland ponies, hopefully I’ll be able to take photos next visit. Meantime, here’s a bucket of well aged horse poo. #GrowYourOwn #Gardening #Manure #PesticideFree
So, my neighbor (who is on our town's select board) made the excellent suggestion that places that are more rural should invest in providing low-cost or free composters for folks to compost their own food waste (something that #ecomaine encourages)! Some more urban areas use #GarbageToGarden or #WeCompostIt services [see next post] to deal with food waste, which is sometimes where #Agricycle gets involved! #EcoMaine has been partnering with Agricycle since 2016!
Ecomaine Launches Food Waste Recovery Service
Maine Public | By Patty Wight
Published September 7, 2016
"Open up a refrigerator and the chances of finding limp lettuce or soggy squash are pretty high. Here in the U.S., it’s likely that this food will find its way into the garbage — according to the USDA, at least 30 percent of the nation’s food supply is wasted.
"A new program launched Wednesday by ecomaine aims to get that food out of the trash and give it a second life as #compost or energy.
"When confronted with produce past its prime, says ecomaine’s CEO Kevin Roche, there’s really one major roadblock that steers people toward dropping it in the trash versus a compost bucket.
" 'The ‘ick’ factor is what I call it,' he says.
"Rotten food is messy, it smells and it attracts fruit flies. But Roche says ecomaine now has a unique way to manage the ick factor: by sealing that food waste in a clear plastic bag.
" 'You go to the grocery store, and when you buy your oranges or your head of broccoli, and the first thing you usually do is put it in a clear bag. And we feel that could be an avenue for us to contain the ick factor and get a second use out of that plastic bag,' he says.
"Starting Wednesday, ecomaine accepts food waste knotted up in plastic bags. Ecomaine doesn’t collect the bags itself. It consolidates waste picked up by commercial services, such as Garbage to Garden or #WeCompostIt!, at a cost of about $55 a ton.
"On Wednesday morning, a collection truck from #AgriCycleEnergy unloads a giant salad of rotten corn, peppers, tomatoes and other produce at ecomaine’s facility in Portland.
" 'We’re collecting from restaurants, colleges, hospitals, and a variety of other generators of food waste,' says Dan Bell, manager at Agri-Cycle Energy in #ExeterMaine, where all of this produce consolidated at ecomaine will eventually go.
" 'A special machine at Agri-Cycle Energy removes the plastic bags, which are returned to ecomaine to be burned for electricity. The food waste, meanwhile, is blended with an equal amount of cow #manure from a nearby dairy farm, then heated and churned for about 30 days using a process called anaerobic digestion.
" 'We have two large domes, and it’s essentially enclosed, so we’re capturing all of the gases in the process of breaking down food waste,' Bell says.
"The #biogas is used to produce heat and electricity. And the food waste, he says Bell, turns into #fertilizer and animal bedding.
" 'This is material that’s been in the waste stream forever. And it always will be. And it’ll always be something that has to be handled. But pulling it out and removing it and source separating it allows companies like ours and other #digesters across the country to put that material to work for us, versus just sitting in a landfill,' he says.
"Because food generally doesn’t break down in landfills. A couple years ago, Roche says ecomaine dug down into one of its landfills.
" 'We found chicken breasts that were 25 years old, tomatoes, Ruffles potato chips that were 25 years old,' he says.
"Roche says businesses and consumers can prevent food waste through correct planning. But when lost or forgotten food is discovered in the dark recesses of a fridge, that’s where ecomaine’s food waste recovery program comes in.
"Initially, he says, it won’t account for a huge chunk of what ecomaine processes, which amounts to 170,000 tons of trash and 45,000 tons of recycling per year.
" 'Even if we can get upwards of five tons a year, we feel that would be a good start to our program,' Roche says.
"It’s an important step, he says, toward reaching Maine’s statewide recycling goal of 50 percent by 2021."
[I'm wondering how close Maine is to that goal?]
Oof, I'm jabsolutely schnackered, but the potatoes are all in.
Leveled the mess from the fence removal with the digger.
Made a no-dig bed from Barnfloor Special*, a small amount of kitchen compost and a bunch of hay raked on top.
Barn is looking a step up again and I have enough space to park the machinery side by side, which is nice.
* The barn floor had a mix of old hay, manure, rotting wood and dry dusty soil, which is now a garden bed.
EU drags its feet on one-year-old #manure proposal: The Commission will try to break the deadlock at a meeting with member state representatives in June, but farmer and industry lobbies – as well as some MEPs – are losing patience. https://www.euractiv.com/section/agriculture-food/news/eu-drags-its-feet-on-one-year-old-manure-proposal/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=dlvr.it
(4/4) Ammonia #emissions, a key contributor to air #pollution, originate mostly from #manure management in animal husbandry; its energy-intensive nature (incl. machinery & fertilizers) contributes substantially to the overall carbon #footprint of animal-based food production: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crsust.2025.100281
Thread 3/45
Official flag of the fascist regime being installed in Washington, DC, on January 20, 2025.
Yes, it stinks.
#USPolitics #GadsdenFlag #Trump #Manure #TuckersBalls
(5/6) It's the way that #dairy operations store #manure that produces the potent greenhouse gas—despite other, low-methane storage methods. #Biodigesters aren't removing greenhouse gas from the air, they generate #methane they didn't need to generate & then trap it: https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/392881/dairy-biogas-manure-digester
Interesting article... So, ammonia found in humanure inhibits methane production. However, the addition of chicken feathers seems to be a workaround! I did not know that!
@BrambleBearGrrrauwling @Spr1g
How #biogas from human waste will lead to energy independence
Chicken feathers enhance the quality of biogas produced from human waste, allowing impoverished communities to generate their own power.
by Victoria Corless | Apr 14, 2022
"Accessible and affordable biogas
The solution they propose centers around the production of biogas, conventional sources of which include #FoodScraps, #wastewater, and animal #manure. But human waste could provide a viable, renewable source of energy, especially in regions of the world where energy supplies are unstable.
"'The shift into animal waste such as poultry droppings and cattle dung has huge prospects, but it is not sustainable in the long term as rural farmers depend on it,' said the researchers. 'The use of human excreta is the most available and sustainable due to the human population.'
"One challenge, however, is the ammonia naturally found in human waste, which inhibits the growth of #methane-producing bacteria and results in impure biogas with high levels of nitrogen. Chemical and microbial pretreatments are an option, but the team wanted to develop a truly sustainable and accessible solution to meet energy demands in impoverished regions.
"The trick, according to the study published recently in Global Challenges, is to combine the waste with powdered chicken feathers. The feathers are themselves useful in generating biogas, but only when pretreated to make them amenable to anaerobic digestion. Instead of adding an additional treatment step, the scientists let the microbes found naturally in human waste do all the work for them.
"In a laboratory-scale biodigestor, the team mixed together powdered chicken feathers and human waste in a 1:5 ratio and allowed the solution to incubate, measuring the quantity and quality of biogas produced over roughly two months. Compared to controls that contained no powdered chicken feathers, the biogas produced when the feathers were co-digested with the human waste contained, at minimum, 68% less nitrogen and 73% more methane.
“This experimentation means that there could be minimum nitrogen content with more microbes in the human excreta acting on the chicken feather as biotreatment,” said the authors. “The extensive effect of the microbes can be seen in the improved carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide content [of the biogas].'"
https://www.advancedsciencenews.com/how-biogas-from-human-waste-will-lead-to-energy-independence/
As a onetime son of the soil I feel compelled to inspect and nod approvingly at the manure/dark soil dumped into the rainway being built in my neighborhood soon they will probably smooth it out and plant grasses and so forth
@wikipedia really has everything
Even an elaborate article on #humanure & its uses!!!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reuse_of_human_excreta
Bonus link for "Humanure"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compost#Human_excreta
WTH is going on a WaPo lately? They did reincarnation, crankery wellness IV drips, and now #biodynamic nonsense.
Did they hire Joe Mercola recently or something?
They removed 2 of my science-based comments on the biodynamic piece.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/food/2024/07/05/biodynamic-farming-wine-rudolph-steiner/
I am fascinated by #biochar and #pyrolysis in general lately. Any idea how cheap you can build a reactor that safely processes chicken and swine #manure? A couple of #farmer friends might be interested
Landscaping? There will be grass, which will attract flying rats I mean geese. Canada geese and their silly, noisy honk wars at dawn, constant winners of the prize for Generating Most Manure per Biomass.
Ironically, there's a sign 3 meters further along the same bank saying not to feed the geese.
Maguire’s literally holding his nuts and the announcer says he’s holding high up on his leg. #ChampionsLeague #ManUre #sports