- Forum
- categories
- Sanitation systems
- Challenging environments, humanitarian and emergency situations
- Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
19.3k views
Re: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
@chris
The urinals cost 25USD to make when we make them in the UK and ship them to the locations in the Middle East. They will be half that cost once we produce locally. Within that cost calculation is also the collection and treatment of the urine and reuse as a fertilizer (the services attached).
I have checked out your design when we were looking for existing urinals, however we wanted something a bit more durable, and acceptable by the users. If we get a good response, then we could try to pilot something like yours in a extreme emergency situations.
Rich Earth Institute are our knowledge partners! They are great!
Thanks for your comments.
The urinals cost 25USD to make when we make them in the UK and ship them to the locations in the Middle East. They will be half that cost once we produce locally. Within that cost calculation is also the collection and treatment of the urine and reuse as a fertilizer (the services attached).
I have checked out your design when we were looking for existing urinals, however we wanted something a bit more durable, and acceptable by the users. If we get a good response, then we could try to pilot something like yours in a extreme emergency situations.
Rich Earth Institute are our knowledge partners! They are great!
Thanks for your comments.
cewas Middle East
www.cewasmiddleeast.org
www.theurinalproject.org
www.cewasmiddleeast.org
www.theurinalproject.org
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to replyRe: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Dear Niege,
We'd be happy to provide sludge free waterless sanitation solution. However, water can still be used for hygiene purpose but not flushing. Kindly click the link below for better understanding our system.
www.ecoloogroup.com/pdf/ECOLOO_Flyer.pdf
Thank you and take care!
We'd be happy to provide sludge free waterless sanitation solution. However, water can still be used for hygiene purpose but not flushing. Kindly click the link below for better understanding our system.
www.ecoloogroup.com/pdf/ECOLOO_Flyer.pdf
Thank you and take care!
Best Regards,
Imad Agi
Chairman & CEO, ECOLOO Group
Inventor | Ecopreneur | Speaker
W: www.ecoloogroup.com
FB: www.facebook.com/ecoloogroup
Eco Friendly | Odour Free | Water Free | Sewage Free | Energy Free | Chemical Free
: : Top 10 Global Innovators & Solution Providers on Global Challenges at Solutions Summit 2016 - United Nations Foundation, USA
Imad Agi
Chairman & CEO, ECOLOO Group
Inventor | Ecopreneur | Speaker
W: www.ecoloogroup.com
FB: www.facebook.com/ecoloogroup
Eco Friendly | Odour Free | Water Free | Sewage Free | Energy Free | Chemical Free
: : Top 10 Global Innovators & Solution Providers on Global Challenges at Solutions Summit 2016 - United Nations Foundation, USA
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to replyRe: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Hi everyone,
@Lillian. I saw your great video and I am surprised that your urinals cost $25... and I don't see any control of the odors that the gallons of fermenting urine in the jug would generate. Check out my English/Spanish blog, inodoroseco.blogspot.com/2013/05/urinarios-ecologicos.html, to see how we make very functional unisex urinals from two 4-liter plastic bottles, at the cost of rescuing those bottles from the trash and little bit of tape and string. These are intended to be emptied onto garden soil or into storage tanks as soon as possible, or at least every morning. They get rinsed with water and have no problem with smell.
Also check out Youtube videos about the Rich Earth Institutes urine recycling project. They have a simple, inexpensive model. They do not talk about it, but they have a hose for the smelly air that is expelled to come out through. I am currently working on a simple model where this is filtered through enough soil to control the smell.
Best wishes,
Chris Canaday
@Lillian. I saw your great video and I am surprised that your urinals cost $25... and I don't see any control of the odors that the gallons of fermenting urine in the jug would generate. Check out my English/Spanish blog, inodoroseco.blogspot.com/2013/05/urinarios-ecologicos.html, to see how we make very functional unisex urinals from two 4-liter plastic bottles, at the cost of rescuing those bottles from the trash and little bit of tape and string. These are intended to be emptied onto garden soil or into storage tanks as soon as possible, or at least every morning. They get rinsed with water and have no problem with smell.
Also check out Youtube videos about the Rich Earth Institutes urine recycling project. They have a simple, inexpensive model. They do not talk about it, but they have a hose for the smelly air that is expelled to come out through. I am currently working on a simple model where this is filtered through enough soil to control the smell.
Best wishes,
Chris Canaday
Conservation Biologist and EcoSan Promoter
Omaere Ethnobotanical Park
Puyo, Pastaza, Ecuador, South America
inodoroseco.blogspot.com
Omaere Ethnobotanical Park
Puyo, Pastaza, Ecuador, South America
inodoroseco.blogspot.com
The following user(s) like this post: KaiMikkel
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to replyRe: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Hello Niege,
I am on my last day here in Lebanon and unfortunately just seeing this message. We looking for a location and an organization with whom to pilot a unisex urinal in Lebanon that we have designed for emergency sanitation systems. The urinals are waiting to be used! We have a potential partnership with AUB to reuse the urine with some reforestation projects that are happening through LRI.
Our website is: www.theurinalproject.org
Please get in touch if you think this would be interesting for your situation.
Kind regards,
Lillian
I am on my last day here in Lebanon and unfortunately just seeing this message. We looking for a location and an organization with whom to pilot a unisex urinal in Lebanon that we have designed for emergency sanitation systems. The urinals are waiting to be used! We have a potential partnership with AUB to reuse the urine with some reforestation projects that are happening through LRI.
Our website is: www.theurinalproject.org
Please get in touch if you think this would be interesting for your situation.
Kind regards,
Lillian
cewas Middle East
www.cewasmiddleeast.org
www.theurinalproject.org
www.cewasmiddleeast.org
www.theurinalproject.org
Attachments:
-
UrinalPhil.jpg (Filesize: 82KB)
The following user(s) like this post: KaiMikkel, annag
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to reply- Neige
-
Topic AuthorLess
- Posts: 3
- Likes received: 1
Re: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Attachments:
-
toilet.JPG (Filesize: 40KB)
-
toilet2.JPG (Filesize: 63KB)
-
toilet3.JPG (Filesize: 40KB)
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to replyRe: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Hi again,
About the lenght of use in festival, yes it is just a couple of days, but in many places (France, Australia, Canada), dry toilets are installed permanently in places far from networks but with high use such as touristic places.
I have had this kind of toilets and I have seen them in use in public places and there was no problem with flies. You can see pictures of the fly trap here : (pictures 7, 8 and 10). it is a natural light trap. There is an inverted cone inside a PVC pipe (on one side) and glass window on the the other side. The flies are attracted by the light and come inside but cannot get out. They fall dead in the bag underneath.
About the lack of water : if you decide to convey faeces from one place to another the transport is a risky step during which and after which you need to observe good hygiene practices and you need to take time to train people on these practices. In my view the conditions in a refugee camp and in emergency are not adapted to this, unless as you point out, it is a camp that is intended to be there for a long time.
@ Chris Canaday. I think the capacity building should be really done at the level of the emergency organisations (and there is a dynamic in this sense with the German Wash network who is organising training on sanitation in emergencies) so that ecological sanitation solutions become mainstream in emergencies and that emergency aid workers are able to provide operational toilets that protect the health and the environement. For people however, in emergency situations I am afraid there is not much space for long term education or interest in this topic...
About the lenght of use in festival, yes it is just a couple of days, but in many places (France, Australia, Canada), dry toilets are installed permanently in places far from networks but with high use such as touristic places.
I have had this kind of toilets and I have seen them in use in public places and there was no problem with flies. You can see pictures of the fly trap here : (pictures 7, 8 and 10). it is a natural light trap. There is an inverted cone inside a PVC pipe (on one side) and glass window on the the other side. The flies are attracted by the light and come inside but cannot get out. They fall dead in the bag underneath.
About the lack of water : if you decide to convey faeces from one place to another the transport is a risky step during which and after which you need to observe good hygiene practices and you need to take time to train people on these practices. In my view the conditions in a refugee camp and in emergency are not adapted to this, unless as you point out, it is a camp that is intended to be there for a long time.
@ Chris Canaday. I think the capacity building should be really done at the level of the emergency organisations (and there is a dynamic in this sense with the German Wash network who is organising training on sanitation in emergencies) so that ecological sanitation solutions become mainstream in emergencies and that emergency aid workers are able to provide operational toilets that protect the health and the environement. For people however, in emergency situations I am afraid there is not much space for long term education or interest in this topic...
Cécile Laborderie
MAKATI Environnement
MAKATI Environnement
The following user(s) like this post: JKMakowka
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to replyRe: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Dear Neige,
I think UDDTs are a good option for this case, but it is key to emphasize education and follow-up. It is also key to demonstrate the benefits and not oblige anyone to use a system they do not understand or want. I would suggest making and using a UDDT yourself and then showing it to the most open-minded, influential members of the community to hopefully interest them, so the system can expand through the community gradually.
I invite you to have a look at my blog to see a variety of practical, low-cost models of UDDTs. For example, this one costs essentially nothing and only requires rescuing a few selected bits of plastic from the trash:
inodoroseco.blogspot.com/2013/10/a-free-...ist-uddt-part-1.html
inodoroseco.blogspot.com/2013/10/a-free-...ist-uddt-part-2.html
I agree with Elisabeth that it is good to collect feces in interchangeable containers, so more people can use the UDDT. Nonetheless, for various reasons the goal should be for each family to have their own toilet, so people do not have to wait in long lines, it is clear who needs to clean it, and people already have close contact with their family members.
Feces can be stored in woven, polypropylene sacks and, if there is nowhere else to store them, they can be buried in the ground (for lets say 2 years in the temperate zone).
Perforated hoses are a great option for distributing urine in the soil, as Cecile mentioned. And the portable urinals of the Minimalist UDDT mentioned above, permit easy dilution with greywater and then it can be dosed appropriately on the soil in the agricultural fields. Urine could potentially be sold or traded to the farmers for use as fertilizer.
Another great option is to build simple ArborLoos, like this one:
inodoroseco.blogspot.com/2012/08/scroll-...nglish-en-abril.html
This may also allow for anal washing with water, if that is what these people prefer.
Please let us know more about this case, including maybe some photos. Do these people prefer to wash or wipe? Squat or sit? How long are they likely to be there? What crops are grown in the nearby agricultural fields?
How else can we help? Please do not hesitate to ask more questions.
Best wishes,
Chris Canaday
I think UDDTs are a good option for this case, but it is key to emphasize education and follow-up. It is also key to demonstrate the benefits and not oblige anyone to use a system they do not understand or want. I would suggest making and using a UDDT yourself and then showing it to the most open-minded, influential members of the community to hopefully interest them, so the system can expand through the community gradually.
I invite you to have a look at my blog to see a variety of practical, low-cost models of UDDTs. For example, this one costs essentially nothing and only requires rescuing a few selected bits of plastic from the trash:
inodoroseco.blogspot.com/2013/10/a-free-...ist-uddt-part-1.html
inodoroseco.blogspot.com/2013/10/a-free-...ist-uddt-part-2.html
I agree with Elisabeth that it is good to collect feces in interchangeable containers, so more people can use the UDDT. Nonetheless, for various reasons the goal should be for each family to have their own toilet, so people do not have to wait in long lines, it is clear who needs to clean it, and people already have close contact with their family members.
Feces can be stored in woven, polypropylene sacks and, if there is nowhere else to store them, they can be buried in the ground (for lets say 2 years in the temperate zone).
Perforated hoses are a great option for distributing urine in the soil, as Cecile mentioned. And the portable urinals of the Minimalist UDDT mentioned above, permit easy dilution with greywater and then it can be dosed appropriately on the soil in the agricultural fields. Urine could potentially be sold or traded to the farmers for use as fertilizer.
Another great option is to build simple ArborLoos, like this one:
inodoroseco.blogspot.com/2012/08/scroll-...nglish-en-abril.html
This may also allow for anal washing with water, if that is what these people prefer.
Please let us know more about this case, including maybe some photos. Do these people prefer to wash or wipe? Squat or sit? How long are they likely to be there? What crops are grown in the nearby agricultural fields?
How else can we help? Please do not hesitate to ask more questions.
Best wishes,
Chris Canaday
Conservation Biologist and EcoSan Promoter
Omaere Ethnobotanical Park
Puyo, Pastaza, Ecuador, South America
inodoroseco.blogspot.com
Omaere Ethnobotanical Park
Puyo, Pastaza, Ecuador, South America
inodoroseco.blogspot.com
The following user(s) like this post: Elisabeth, KaiMikkel
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to replyRe: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
How long where these in use during festivals? I don't think a few days of heavy use is at all comparable to use in a camp setting for several weeks or months (sometimes years... ).
Fly breeding needs 7-14 days for the first generation to mature (plus the initial time for the flies to find the latrines and lay the eggs. So the real problems with flies start after two weeks and in my experience screens and active ventilation is definitely not sufficient to deal with the thousands of flies that very quickly grow up in the pits.
Only a real physical seal (water or not) or quick drying to prevent the larvae to develop into adults.
I also don't understand your point of lacking water preventing the use of removable containers. But I agree that composting etc. is probably to complicated, but the contents of the containers can also be disposed in a landfill for a while.
Fly breeding needs 7-14 days for the first generation to mature (plus the initial time for the flies to find the latrines and lay the eggs. So the real problems with flies start after two weeks and in my experience screens and active ventilation is definitely not sufficient to deal with the thousands of flies that very quickly grow up in the pits.
Only a real physical seal (water or not) or quick drying to prevent the larvae to develop into adults.
I also don't understand your point of lacking water preventing the use of removable containers. But I agree that composting etc. is probably to complicated, but the contents of the containers can also be disposed in a landfill for a while.
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to replyRe: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Hi again,
In France we are using dry toilets a) for major events like festivals receiving thousands of people b) like a solution for places loaded with tourists (sometimes 10 000 per day). (see ecosec member of this group, ecodomeo, saniverte, petit coin nature.... I think an Australian company is also starting to provide dry toilets for camps (I don't remember their name)
I have always thought that these kind of toilets would be adapted to refugee camps because I think there isn't really a limit is terms of number of users. The limit is the size of the composting chamber (considering 0.2 liters of feces/person/day).
What I know is that these toilet do not smell because there is either a passive ventilation (with a heat extractor, then it might smell in the morning) or a mecanic ventilation (no smell at all). And there are not flies because of the screens, and a fly trap. As a result there is little maintenance to do and the toilets have high standard (appreciated by people in Europe). The interesting thing is to infiltrate urine in the ground which removes most of the volume which needs ot be treated.
I would not be in favor of removable containers in a refugee camp because of lack of water, hence limited ressources for personal hygiene and risk of epidemics. I think you also need experienced and motivated human ressources to do compost of faeces which still has a high content in humidity and it also creates a risk with the flies (I think feces should remained contained until it is well hygienised).
By the way there is also a sanitation in emergencies working group in this website with a fact sheet on the topic and also plenty of other ressources on sanitation in emergencies. Here : www.susana.org/en/working-groups/emergen...struction-situations.
As Elizabeth was saying please let us know more about your NGO, project and environment !
Cecile
In France we are using dry toilets a) for major events like festivals receiving thousands of people b) like a solution for places loaded with tourists (sometimes 10 000 per day). (see ecosec member of this group, ecodomeo, saniverte, petit coin nature.... I think an Australian company is also starting to provide dry toilets for camps (I don't remember their name)
I have always thought that these kind of toilets would be adapted to refugee camps because I think there isn't really a limit is terms of number of users. The limit is the size of the composting chamber (considering 0.2 liters of feces/person/day).
What I know is that these toilet do not smell because there is either a passive ventilation (with a heat extractor, then it might smell in the morning) or a mecanic ventilation (no smell at all). And there are not flies because of the screens, and a fly trap. As a result there is little maintenance to do and the toilets have high standard (appreciated by people in Europe). The interesting thing is to infiltrate urine in the ground which removes most of the volume which needs ot be treated.
I would not be in favor of removable containers in a refugee camp because of lack of water, hence limited ressources for personal hygiene and risk of epidemics. I think you also need experienced and motivated human ressources to do compost of faeces which still has a high content in humidity and it also creates a risk with the flies (I think feces should remained contained until it is well hygienised).
By the way there is also a sanitation in emergencies working group in this website with a fact sheet on the topic and also plenty of other ressources on sanitation in emergencies. Here : www.susana.org/en/working-groups/emergen...struction-situations.
As Elizabeth was saying please let us know more about your NGO, project and environment !
Cecile
Cécile Laborderie
MAKATI Environnement
MAKATI Environnement
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to reply- Elisabeth
-
- Moderator
- Freelance consultant since 2012 (former roles: program manager at GIZ and SuSanA secretariat, lecturer, process engineer for wastewater treatment plants)
Less- Posts: 3372
- Karma: 54
- Likes received: 931
Re: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Just a couple of quick comments from my side:
Great that Cécile pointed you to the work of Elmer in the Philippines. He's also posted about his work on the forum, see here for using UDDTs after flooding:
forum.susana.org/forum/categories/179-fl...-on-use-of-uddts#804
and here after a typhoon:
forum.susana.org/forum/categories/67-cha...oon-haiyan-survivors
So, it seems that UDDTs have worked in those situations in the Philippines - with the right setup, guidance and maintence provided by Elmer's team (?).
I think it's important in your case, if you think that UDDTs could work, to go for the single vault UDDTs with removable containers where the feces bins can be emptied as often as needed (and the feces can receive further treatment in a separate composting or drying step). That's better than going for double vault UDDTs and then you are not restricted to Kris' design figure of 5 users per UDDT.
If you want to read more about single and double vault UDDTs, the Wikipedia page is a good starting point and will point you to all the important documents:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urine-diverting_dry_toilet
Neige, could you tell us a bit more which NGO this is and which refugees (just curious) - are they mainly Syrians? Are you saying they have stopped the anal cleansing with water due to lack of water? Is that difficult/uncomfortable for them?
Regards,
Elisabeth
P.S. It is so important to make these refugee camps into decent living spaces so that we don't send more people onto these dangerous trips to Europe (drownings at sea) and crowding into the few countries willing to accept them (currently only Germany and Sweden, it seems). The pictures of thousands and thousands of refugees on that Balkan route in the cold weather now are quite horrendous although I totally understand that after some years in such a refugee camp someone would say "I've had enough, I will try my luck in another country!". So it's very difficult.
Great that Cécile pointed you to the work of Elmer in the Philippines. He's also posted about his work on the forum, see here for using UDDTs after flooding:
forum.susana.org/forum/categories/179-fl...-on-use-of-uddts#804
and here after a typhoon:
forum.susana.org/forum/categories/67-cha...oon-haiyan-survivors
So, it seems that UDDTs have worked in those situations in the Philippines - with the right setup, guidance and maintence provided by Elmer's team (?).
I think it's important in your case, if you think that UDDTs could work, to go for the single vault UDDTs with removable containers where the feces bins can be emptied as often as needed (and the feces can receive further treatment in a separate composting or drying step). That's better than going for double vault UDDTs and then you are not restricted to Kris' design figure of 5 users per UDDT.
If you want to read more about single and double vault UDDTs, the Wikipedia page is a good starting point and will point you to all the important documents:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urine-diverting_dry_toilet
Neige, could you tell us a bit more which NGO this is and which refugees (just curious) - are they mainly Syrians? Are you saying they have stopped the anal cleansing with water due to lack of water? Is that difficult/uncomfortable for them?
Regards,
Elisabeth
P.S. It is so important to make these refugee camps into decent living spaces so that we don't send more people onto these dangerous trips to Europe (drownings at sea) and crowding into the few countries willing to accept them (currently only Germany and Sweden, it seems). The pictures of thousands and thousands of refugees on that Balkan route in the cold weather now are quite horrendous although I totally understand that after some years in such a refugee camp someone would say "I've had enough, I will try my luck in another country!". So it's very difficult.
Dr. Elisabeth von Muench
Freelance consultant on environmental and climate projects
Located in Ulm, Germany
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
My Wikipedia user profile: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:EMsmile
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/elisabethvonmuench/
Freelance consultant on environmental and climate projects
Located in Ulm, Germany
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
My Wikipedia user profile: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:EMsmile
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/elisabethvonmuench/
The following user(s) like this post: cecile, KaiMikkel
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to replyRe: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Neige wrote: In order not to be overloaded, what is the maximum number of persons that could use the toilet per day?
That depends on many factors, like temperature, air humidity, active ventilation, humidity content of feces (much higher with diarrhea!) etc.
Usually I would not recommend a single UDDT for more than 5 (maybe 10 in hot & dry climates) regular users, but I guess that is a relative conservative figure that keeps in mind that many of the promoted benefits from UDDTs really only work if the feces dry quickly. And only if that is the case, people can be convinced that it is actually a better technology than flush toilets or pit-latrines.
Also thanks for the clarification in regards to the setting, but I don't think this changes much in my recommendations, except that regular container replacement services will be much harder to do in dispersed settlements.
@cecile: fair points, but with all that extra effort you probably still end up with something that from a user's point of view is not better than a standard VIP.
P.S.: if the water supply situation is so bad, maybe that is something one should look at first? Pit-latrines also do not really cause that much pollution problems from an purely agricultural perspective (one might call it organic fertilizer ).
The following user(s) like this post: cecile
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to replyRe: Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Dear Neige,
WEDC has published technical notes for emergencies : wedc.lboro.ac.uk//knowledge/index.html and several ressources that can be useful to deal with sanitation in emergency.
For the UDDT I only partially agree with you Kris ...
If you install UDDT toilets in a refugee camp you can deal with the issue of smell by installing a ventilator in the exhaust pipe of the chamber containing the faeces (even with solar panel). Make sure the exhaust pipe has a fly screen and the ventilator also. And make sure you clean the screens often. What is important is that the chamber is as airtight as possible. Air tight chamber + good ventilation will get rid of the smell mechanically.
To speed up the dryin process or composting process, it will depend on what you find in the area : ash, paint the door of the chamber in black. If it is an agricultural region you can also put local earthworms in the chamber (in that case do not paint the door in black because earthworms like humidity. Put them on the side (not right in the middle of the feces pile) with earth they are used to.
If it is a flood prone area you need to make raised toilets and make sure the feces chamber is a little bit raised or at least build a mound around it.
Urine can be infiltrated in the ground with a simple perforated pipe in a bed of sand and gravel. The lenght of the drain will depend on sol permeability but to give you an exemple, a 8 meter drain can manage the urine of 100 persons per day.
All this can be done if you know the refugees are there for a while. It is not adapted for temporary camps. But sometimes camps last for many years...
I agree with Kris about the difficulty to change attitudes and how well will people understand about a UD system so this would have to be evaluated with a quick survey.
Wand Foundation from the Philippines, who is also a partner of SuSanA has used ecosan toilets in flooded areas after the typhoon Hayian in the Philippines. I am sure they can give you very practical advice on this issue.
Good luck with your project.
Cecile
WEDC has published technical notes for emergencies : wedc.lboro.ac.uk//knowledge/index.html and several ressources that can be useful to deal with sanitation in emergency.
For the UDDT I only partially agree with you Kris ...
If you install UDDT toilets in a refugee camp you can deal with the issue of smell by installing a ventilator in the exhaust pipe of the chamber containing the faeces (even with solar panel). Make sure the exhaust pipe has a fly screen and the ventilator also. And make sure you clean the screens often. What is important is that the chamber is as airtight as possible. Air tight chamber + good ventilation will get rid of the smell mechanically.
To speed up the dryin process or composting process, it will depend on what you find in the area : ash, paint the door of the chamber in black. If it is an agricultural region you can also put local earthworms in the chamber (in that case do not paint the door in black because earthworms like humidity. Put them on the side (not right in the middle of the feces pile) with earth they are used to.
If it is a flood prone area you need to make raised toilets and make sure the feces chamber is a little bit raised or at least build a mound around it.
Urine can be infiltrated in the ground with a simple perforated pipe in a bed of sand and gravel. The lenght of the drain will depend on sol permeability but to give you an exemple, a 8 meter drain can manage the urine of 100 persons per day.
All this can be done if you know the refugees are there for a while. It is not adapted for temporary camps. But sometimes camps last for many years...
I agree with Kris about the difficulty to change attitudes and how well will people understand about a UD system so this would have to be evaluated with a quick survey.
Wand Foundation from the Philippines, who is also a partner of SuSanA has used ecosan toilets in flooded areas after the typhoon Hayian in the Philippines. I am sure they can give you very practical advice on this issue.
Good luck with your project.
Cecile
Cécile Laborderie
MAKATI Environnement
MAKATI Environnement
The following user(s) like this post: JKMakowka
Please Log in to join the conversation.
You need to login to reply
Share this thread:
- Forum
- categories
- Sanitation systems
- Challenging environments, humanitarian and emergency situations
- Dry toilets for refugees in Lebanon
Time to create page: 0.406 seconds