EireWolf wrote:Hmmmm... well, instead of money, you could ask people to pledge to use less water in specific ways, like the ones you've mentioned here. You could still drum up publicity to raise awareness. It's obviously something you're passionate about.
samuraidragon wrote:Here's an article on a process that among other things, can take in carbon-based anything and turn it into completely sanitized water. That goes for sewage, medical waste, rubber, anything.
http://www.discover.com/issues/may-03/features/featoil/
Pinecone Tortoi wrote:Ultra Magnus - Ugh, you and me both. I know there's some places out there - like an environmental shop called 'Biome' (which sells, amongst other things, recycled car tyre notepads, circuitboard notepads, hemp bags, shower timers and water powered alarm clocks) but I'm not aware of an actual conservation group we could support. Presumably there's a few that adopt the cause, but I'm not sure which ones. What say we start one of our own? Some online water saving movement? Sounds fun, eh?
Warrior 4 Jesus wrote:This just in: I've read (from realistic sources) that Adelaide has been drinking filtered sewerage water for a week or so now.
And I'm not dead yet.
Well that's the thing, it breaks it down to a molecular level. It doesn't just clean it, it reverts it to its original state.Warrior 4 Jesus wrote:Oh, that's good. But medical waste? Oh gosh. I wouldn't want to wish that on anyone - sanitized or not.
It's not just an oil purifier, but since that's one of the byproducts that will turn the most heads, it's what they are billing it as. "Turn anything into carbon black" probably wouldn't command the same attention. hahaWarrior 4 Jesus wrote:Samuraidragon, that oil purifier article was very interesting. I would like to know if there is a similar process involved in purifying our recyled water for drinking?
Where could I find this sort of info on the Net?
Thanks
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