- Sanitation systems
- Toilets without urine diversion
- Container-based, mobile or bag-based toilets
- Webinar from Urine Diversion Summit -- Sasha Kramer of SOIL presents "Container-Based Sanitation: an Emerging Ecological Alternative to Sewers for Rapidly Expanding Cities"
Webinar from Urine Diversion Summit -- Sasha Kramer of SOIL presents "Container-Based Sanitation: an Emerging Ecological Alternative to Sewers for Rapidly Expanding Cities"
4124 views
- noe-hays
-
Less
- Posts: 12
- Karma: 2
- Likes received: 10
Re: Webinar from Urine Diversion Summit -- Sasha Kramer of SOIL presents "Container-Based Sanitation: an Emerging Ecological Alternative to Sewers for Rapidly Expanding Cities"
Container-Based Sanitation: an Emerging Ecological Alternative to Sewers for Rapidly Expanding Cities
When:
10:00 AM EDT (16:00 Berlin, 15:00 London), August 16th, 2018, from the Rich Earth Institute's 4th Urine Diversion Summit in Vermont, USA
Registration link:
zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_fiPvSXPkRzSr2K_NrUcOBQ
About the Presenter:
Dr. Kramer is an ecologist and human rights advocate who has been living and working in Haiti since 2004. She received her Ph.D. in Ecology from Stanford University in 2006 and co-founded SOIL that same year while also completing a postdoctoral research position with the Collaboratory for Research on Global Projects at Stanford.
While Sasha spends the majority of her time living and working in Haiti, she is also a global advocate for the recycling of nutrients in human waste, helping others implement sustainable sanitation projects and inspiring people around the world to participate in the sanitation revolution.
Sasha is an Adjunct Professor of International Studies and a Visiting Scholar at the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of Miami. SOIL is working with communities to design and test ecologically and socially beneficial solutions. SOIL implements low-cost technologies that are simple, easy to replicate, require minimal water, and provide safe and dignified access to sanitation.
When:
10:00 AM EDT (16:00 Berlin, 15:00 London), August 16th, 2018, from the Rich Earth Institute's 4th Urine Diversion Summit in Vermont, USA
Registration link:
zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_fiPvSXPkRzSr2K_NrUcOBQ
About the Presenter:
Dr. Kramer is an ecologist and human rights advocate who has been living and working in Haiti since 2004. She received her Ph.D. in Ecology from Stanford University in 2006 and co-founded SOIL that same year while also completing a postdoctoral research position with the Collaboratory for Research on Global Projects at Stanford.
While Sasha spends the majority of her time living and working in Haiti, she is also a global advocate for the recycling of nutrients in human waste, helping others implement sustainable sanitation projects and inspiring people around the world to participate in the sanitation revolution.
Sasha is an Adjunct Professor of International Studies and a Visiting Scholar at the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of Miami. SOIL is working with communities to design and test ecologically and socially beneficial solutions. SOIL implements low-cost technologies that are simple, easy to replicate, require minimal water, and provide safe and dignified access to sanitation.
This message has an attachment file.
Please log in or register to see it.
The following user(s) like this post: Carol McCreary
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to reply- RichEarthInstitute
-
- The Rich Earth Institute envisions a world with clean water and fertile soil achieved by reclaiming the nutrients from our bodies as elements in a life sustaining cycle. We engage in research, education and technological innovation to advance the use of human waste as a resource.
Urine Diversion Webinar: Sasha Kramer's keynote address at the 4th Annual Urine Diversion Summit (USA)
The Rich Earth Institute's Urine Diversion Summit is a convergence of passionate people working to transform human waste into a resource. Building upon the success of the past three summits, the conference will include lightning talks from participants, small group sessions focused on regulation, technical advances, cultural concerns, and research results.
This year Dr. Sasha Kramer, Co-founder and Executive Director of SOIL Haiti will be our keynote speaker. She will present on Thursday August 16th at 10:00 AM EDT (14:00 UTC).
Register here: zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_fiPvSXPkRzSr2K_NrUcOBQ
Dr. Kramer received her Ph.D. in Ecology from Stanford University in 2006 and co-founded SOIL that same year while also completing a postdoctoral research position with the Collaboratory for Research on Global Projects at Stanford. While Sasha spends the majority of her time living and working in Haiti, she is also a global advocate for the recycling of nutrients in human waste, helping others implement sustainable sanitation projects and inspiring people around the world to participate in the sanitation revolution.
This year Dr. Sasha Kramer, Co-founder and Executive Director of SOIL Haiti will be our keynote speaker. She will present on Thursday August 16th at 10:00 AM EDT (14:00 UTC).
Register here: zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_fiPvSXPkRzSr2K_NrUcOBQ
Dr. Kramer received her Ph.D. in Ecology from Stanford University in 2006 and co-founded SOIL that same year while also completing a postdoctoral research position with the Collaboratory for Research on Global Projects at Stanford. While Sasha spends the majority of her time living and working in Haiti, she is also a global advocate for the recycling of nutrients in human waste, helping others implement sustainable sanitation projects and inspiring people around the world to participate in the sanitation revolution.
*Reclaiming urine as a resource*
The following user(s) like this post: Carol McCreary
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to reply
Share this thread:
- Sanitation systems
- Toilets without urine diversion
- Container-based, mobile or bag-based toilets
- Webinar from Urine Diversion Summit -- Sasha Kramer of SOIL presents "Container-Based Sanitation: an Emerging Ecological Alternative to Sewers for Rapidly Expanding Cities"
Recently active users. Who else has been active?
Time to create page: 0.076 seconds