Cho
Jae-weon, an urban and environmental engineering professor at
the Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST),
has designed an eco-friendly toilet connected to a laboratory
that uses excrement to produce biogas and manure.
The BeeVi toilet - a portmanteau of the words bee and vision -
uses a vacuum pump to send faeces into an underground tank,
reducing water use. There, microorganisms break down the waste
to methane, which becomes a source of energy for the building,
powering a gas stove, hot-water boiler and solid oxide fuel
cell.
"If we think out of the box, faeces has precious value to make
energy and manure. I have put this value into ecological
circulation," Cho said.
An average person defecates about 500g a day, which can be
converted to 50 litres of methane gas, the environmental
engineer said. This gas can generate 0.5kWh of electricity or be
used to drive a car for about 1.2km (0.75 miles).
Cho has devised a virtual currency called Ggool, which means
honey in Korean. Each person using the eco-friendly toilet earns
10 Ggool a day.
Students can use the currency to buy goods on campus, from
freshly brewed coffee to instant cup noodles, fruits and books.
The students can pick up the products they want at a shop and
scan a QR code to pay with Ggool.
"I had only ever thought that faeces are dirty, but now it is a
treasure of great value to me," postgraduate student Heo Hui-jin
said at the Ggool market. "I even talk about faeces during
mealtimes to think about buying any book I want."
(Reporting by Minwoo Park, Daewoung Kim; Editing by Karishma
Singh and Gerry Doyle)
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