Monday, April 28, 2008

WILL YOUR CANDIDATE SUPPORT BIDETS?

TREE HUGGER - Bidets [are] a key green technology, because they eliminate the use of toilet paper. They also provide important health benefits. These include increased cleanliness, and the therapeutic effect of water on damaged skin (think rashes or hemorrhoids).

We use 36.5 billions rolls of toilet paper in the U.S. each year, this represents at least 15 million trees pulped. This also involves 473,587,500,000 gallons of water to produce the paper and 253,000 tons of chlorine for bleaching purposes. The manufacturing process requires about 17.3 terawatts of electricity annually. Also, there is the energy and materials involved in packaging and transporting the toilet paper to households across the country.

Toilet paper also constitutes a significant load on the city sewer systems, and water treatment plants. It is also often responsible for clogged pipes. In septic systems, the elimination of toilet paper would mean the septic tank would need to be emptied much less often.

Basically, the huge industry of producing toilet paper could be eliminated through the use of bidets. Instead of using toilet paper, a bidet cleans your posterior using a jet of water. Some bidets also provide an air-drying mechanism.

In Japan, high-tech bidets called Washlets are now the most popular electronic equipment being sold -- 60% of households have them installed. In Venezuela they are found in approximately 90% of households.

1 Comments:

At April 29, 2008 12:10 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The one problem with bidets is that they use potable water and contaminate it with human waste. It's pure madness to poop in potable water. We are facing a future of diminishing potable water sources, increasing the use of water in ways that contaminates it with fececs and sends it directly to the sewer isn't a good use of water resources.

What is needed is composting toilets, and bidets. Then the water usage of the bidet would be defrayed by the end of using water as a "dumping ground".

One doesn't even need a bidet, which in many older American homes would require a very costly remodel to accomodate, one can use a spouted cup and rinse off after using the loo, when one wants a clean behind. Also squatting over the toilet when deficating makes the process less messy on the behind. Unfortunatly flush toilets aren't constructed to squat over, but many composting toilets are.

I have a number of friends who have put humanure systems in their homes. It's cheap and easy, and they all notice big water bill savings.

http://weblife.org/humanure/default.html

 

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