Composting toilets (also called “dry sanitation systems”) have been
in existence for over thirty years and during this time, have been used
broadly in rural settings and other locales where centralized
wastewater treatment is not feasible. Composting toilet systems
differ fundamentally from conventional toilet systems in that they do
not make use of potable water to transport human waste off-site for
treatment, but rather contain waste on-site where pathogens are killed
and nutrients are recycled in localized biological cycles.
(Figure 1: Typical Composting Toilet)
Though early application of composting toilets in the U.S. was largely limited to rustic and outdoor settings, this simple technology is now gaining increased attention for its potential use in urban settings due to a number of appealing environmental advantages over conventional systems:

Though early application of composting toilets in the U.S. was largely limited to rustic and outdoor settings, this simple technology is now gaining increased attention for its potential use in urban settings due to a number of appealing environmental advantages over conventional systems:
- No potable water is required for the system to
function properly – this results in significant water conservation
benefits (up to 30% savings.) A conventional toilet uses up to 5
gallons of potable water per ounce of human waste.
- Because no black water (sewage water) is
created, the need to treat sewage water before releasing it into
receiving waters is eliminated. Furthermore, because other
household grey water sources (laundry, kitchen, shower) are not mixed
with human waste, these sources become more viable for reuse
on-site.
- Composting toilets, when designed and maintained
properly, control pathogens at their source. This reduces the
potential for soil and groundwater contamination from deteriorating
conventional piping infrastructure.
- The energy (and CO2 equivalent) required to build and maintain
distributed composting toilet systems is significantly lower than that
required for centralized waste water treatment facilities and associated piping and pumping infrastructure
- Disruption to ecological systems (soil
structure, tree root systems, etc.) during pipeline installation
(or repair) is eliminated.
- Because composting toilet systems do not produce black water, they do not contribute to combined-sewer overflow events which is particularly beneficial in areas where this is an environmental and regulatory concern.
- Composting toilets provide the infrastructure to
recycle other organic household waste, such as food scraps, paper
and lawn clippings, on site.
- Composting toilet systems produce a useful and valuable product (compost) that can be reinvested on-site to build soil structure and soil fertility. In conventional systems, this potential resource is landfilled.
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