EcocylET
EcocyclET is a system that removes
pollution through evapotranspiration, using plants' requirements for water and
nutrients to filter wastewater. EcocyclET
transforms wastewater into landscaping instead of polluting lakes, streams, and
drinking water sources (groundwater, wells, etc.).
Some sites take the concept further using EcocylET to grow wood and fiber to use for biofuels and construction materials.
First known as the Waste Water
Garden, the EcocyclET is a bio-engineered system whose technologies were
developed and licensed by David Del Porto of the Ecological Engineering Group
in Concord, MA, from a concept originally conceived and tested by University
of Toronto environmental engineering professor Alfred Bernhart.
In 2004, Centre for Sustainable
Watersheds completed the installation of Canada’s first EcocyclET. This
prototype was initiated to demonstrate a sustainable technology for
rural wastewater management, ensuring zero discharge to the ground.
Most plants use photosynthesis
and evapotranspiration (ET). EcocyclET is a closed-loop operation
that employs lined beds of sand, crushed stone and gravels and specified
plantings. Effluent from septic tanks, greywater, composting
toilets leachate or urine from separating toilets, is recirculated through
the bed. There, naturally occurring micro-organisms convert the
chemical constituents of the wastewater into nutrients for plants growth. The
impervious bed liner ensures that no effluent can enter the subsurface
environment or nearby receiving waters. All the wastewater will be ultimately
transpirated as un-transpirated effluent is drained back into a recycle tank,
stored and pumped back to the bed when the conditions for evapotranspiration are
optimal. The system can also by used as a greywater reuse planter to be
installed where soils are too poor to be considered for a soil absorption
system.
References:
https://ecological-engineering.com/ecocyclet/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EcocyclET_systems
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