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Could Your Poop Turn into Gold?
by Leon Kaye on Tuesday, Mar 24th, 2015
In your intestines, there may be a gold — or silver — lining.
Your poop could actually turn into gold. And no, we are not talking about the
Massachusetts fecal bankthat pays $40 a scatological session and then turns the end result into pharmaceuticals. We are talking about a new twist on the Midas Touch. At an American Chemical Society
press conference yesterday, scientists talked about a potential gold mine that is going from toilets to sewage pipes to wastewater treatment plants.
According to
Kathleen Smith, a scientist at the U.S. Geological Survey, metals in trace amounts are everywhere, including in our sewage systems. Nanoparticles that manufacturers tuck into clothing to prevent bad odors, as well as add to hair and body care products and cleaning supplies, all contain some metals. And those metals include gold, silver and platinum. (The same goes for lead, arsenic and other toxins, but that does not mean you should feel guilty about not shopping exclusively at Whole Foods.) So, can they be recovered after being flushed down the toilet or sink drain?
Considering the fact that 7 million tons of biosolids come out of American wastewater treatment plants annually, you could find just about any element in all that sludge. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), about half of that solid waste is sent to landfill or is incinerated. The other half ends up
treated and recycled, and much of it used as fertilizer on agricultural land. Yet despite all the nutrients in that muck, that massive amount is only used on 1 percent of the nation’s farmland. That statistic alone should be a hint that there is more potential to that solid waste than we can imagine.
To that end, Dr. Smith and her team of researchers are taking a two-pronged approach to gauge what exactly is in all that waste. First, the team is looking at how to remove some regulated metals from such waste that limit the biosolids’ use for purposes including fertilizing agricultural land. Next, the team will experiment with chemicals, including leachates, which mining companies use to extract metals out of solids such as rock. Smith noted that in a controlled laboratory setting, such chemicals could be used to extract precious metals safely with minimal environmental damage.
The result could be a figurative and literal gold mine.
Another research group has estimated that the waste excreted from a community of 1 million people could hold as much as US$13 million worth of precious metals. So, could a potential US$4 billion precious-metals market negate the need to mine virgin land, an environmentally destructive process, for these increasingly difficult-to-find elements?
That amount is hardly going to bother the mining and extractive industries, but it could raise the eyebrows of municipal leaders who struggle with waste on a daily basis. The biggest hurdle, of course, is cost, and whether it would be cost effective to process all that sludge no matter how valuable those metals could be. Plus, as we have often seen with new technologies, what works in the lab may not pan out in the real world. But Smith’s team found one interesting trend: No matter where in the country they tested for samples, they found the concentrations of elements such as gold at similar levels. With extracting metals becoming more expensive and difficult, digging for gold could take on a new meaning in the near future.
New project for ECT? Maybe I shouldn't give them any ideas....