PDA

View Full Version : Toxic Sewage Sludge in Your Food


real6
03-01-2010, 12:23 AM
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2009/12/17/Toxic-Sewage-Sludge-in-Your-Food.aspx

The increasing use of sewage sludge as fertilizer for your food is an under-publicized and often hidden threat.

Sludge is the toxic mix that is created by our municipal wastewater treatment facilities. Just about anything that is flushed down toilets or that ends up in sewers is in this sludge; the pollutants in sludge come not just from household sewage, but also from every hospital, industrial plant, and stormwater drain.

For a long time, sludge was simply dumped in the oceans. Over time, it became apparent that this was an environmental and human health disaster. An alternative solution has been pushed since the 1980’s by the U.S. government. The EPA determined that a good way to dispose of treated sewage sludge was to legally distribute it as a cheap alternative to fertilizer.

Unsurprisingly, scientific analysis of the poisons in sewage sludge shows it’s the wrong, and dangerous, solution for U.S. farmers and communities. Unfortunately, many American farmers and gardeners are unknowingly using sludge-derived “compost,” which is given away free in many cities throughout the United States.

As a result, farms and homes across the country have been unknowingly spreading hazardous chemicals and heavy metals on their fields, lawns and gardens.

Meanwhile, Michael Mack, the chief executive of Syngenta, a Swiss agribusiness giant that makes pesticides, is waging war against the organic movement as a whole. He argues that, “Organic food is not only not better for the planet. It is categorically worse.”

“If the whole planet were to suddenly switch to organic farming tomorrow, it would be an ecological disaster,” he said. Pesticides, he argued, “have been proven safe and effective and absolutely not harmful to the environment or to humans.”
Of course, Mr. Mack dismissed the notion that Syngenta, a company that sold nearly $12-billion worth of “crop protection” technologies last year, felt threatened by the organic movement.

Dr. Mercola’s Comments:

If you’re looking for a compelling reason to switch to a primarily organic diet, the fact that it is free from sewage sludge fertilizers is a very good one. Sewage sludge, or “biosolids” — as they’re referred to with a PR spin — began being “recycled” into food crops when, ironically, it was realized that dumping them into rivers, lakes and bays was an environmental disaster.

Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) states that about 50 percent of all biosolids are recycled to land. This sludge is what’s leftover after sewage is treated and processed.

Your first thought may be the “yuck factor” of human waste being used to fertilize your food, but that is only the tip of the iceberg. Every time a paintbrush gets rinsed, an old bottle of medications flushed, or solvents are hosed off a factory floor, it ends up in the sewage system.

So it’s not surprising that a past analysis of sewage sludge by the Environmental Working Group found:

*Over 100 synthetic organic compounds including phthalates, toluene, and chlorobenzene
*Dioxins in sludge from 179 out of 208 systems (80%)
*42 different pesticides — at least one in almost every sample, with an average of almost 2 pesticides per survey sample
*Nine heavy metals, often at high concentrations
And it was sewage sludge that was partly blamed earlier this year for contaminating the White House lawn, and Michelle Obama’s organic vegetable garden, with lead.

This toxic sludge has been masterfully spun by PR masters into an acceptable, even “green,” fertilizer. Even San Francisco, arguably one of the “greenest” cities around, has been distributing toxic sewage sludge to homeowners and schoolyards and calling it “organic compost”! Nevermind that in 2008 its sludge was found to contain industrial chemicals, disinfectants, phenol, pesticides and solvents.

The Center for Food Safety (CFS) has recently petitioned San Francisco to stop this “compost” giveaway, lest it contaminate backyards and communities with toxic chemicals, but the sludge is still being widely used all across the United States.

If you want to get the real dirt on how this toxic sewage sludge has become such a popular fertilizer, I strongly encourage you to read Toxic Sludge is Good for You: Lies, Damn Lies and the Public Relations Industry. It’s written by Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber, the authors of one of my favorite exposes on the PR industry, Trust Us, We’re Experts, and does not disappoin

What is Going On With the State of Agriculture in the United States?

They say truth is stranger than fiction, and the once respectable business of farming in the United States is a perfect example of how true this statement can be.

Gone are the days when farmers grew food according to the laws of nature, with a deserved respect for the Earth and its resources. Nowadays, with the exception of the small but growing movement of organic and sustainable farmers, it may surprise you to learn that farming — once the symbol of all that’s natural and wholesome — creates some of the worst pollution in the United States.

That’s because most “farming” today is nothing like the small farming of our ancestors. The Farm Sanctuary points out that farm animals produce 130 times more waste than humans. And agricultural runoff is the primary reason why 60 percent of U.S. rivers and streams are polluted.

Meanwhile, in areas where animal agriculture is most concentrated (Iowa, Minnesota, North Carolina, Illinois and Indiana round out the top five states with the most factory-farm pollution) bacteria known as pfiesteria is common in waterways. Not only does pfiesteria kill fish, it also causes nausea, memory loss, fatigue and disorientation in people!

Aside from the pollution, factory farms use vast quantities of resources. According to FactoryFarm.org, industrial milking centers that use manure flush cleaning and automatic cow washing systems, go through as much as 150 gallons of water per cow per day!

Energy costs are even steeper.

A 2002 study from the John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health found that industrial farms use an average of three calories of energy to create one calorie of food. Grain-fed beef is at the top of the list of offenders, using 35 calories of energy to produce one calorie of food! And this does not even take into account the energy used to process and transport the foods, so the real toll is even larger.

The Agribusiness Giants are Getting Out of Control!

On top of the environmental assaults, you have agribusiness executives like Michael Mack, the chief executive of pesticide manufacturer Syngenta, making outrageous statements like “Organic food is not only not better for the planet, it is categorically worse.”

What?!

His entire argument was based on the premise that organic farming takes up more land than non-organic farming for the same yield.

He obviously must have missed the recent study that examined a global dataset of 293 farming examples, which found that in developing countries organic systems produce 80% more than conventional farms. And a review of 286 projects in 57 countries found that farmers who used “resource-conserving” or ecological agriculture had increased agricultural productivity by an average of 79%!

“It is clear that ecological agriculture is productive and has the potential to meet food security needs … Moreover, ecological agricultural approaches allow farmers to improve local food production with low-cost, readily available technologies and inputs, without causing environmental damage,” Lim Li Ching, the study’s author, writes.
Really, the question we should be asking ourselves shouldn’t be ‘Can organic or sustainable farming feed the world?’, but ‘How can food production possibly continue as it is?’

When I hear someone extolling the virtues of “modern” agriculture and wondering how “organic” or “sustainable” farming could possibly be the solution, I maintain that the fact we have come to accept inefficient, industrial practices, including dousing our food with chemical fertilizers and pesticides, as a viable way to grow food is the real wonder.

And then I always look at the source, which in this case is a pesticide giant CEO … which makes his motives very clear, indeed.

How Can You Find Safe Food for Your Family?

There are still safe food options out there, but it does take a bit of digging to find them. Your local grocery store is generally NOT going to be the best source for healthy, fresh food.

So, short of starting your own sustainable farm (which you can do on a small-scale in your own backyard), you can find safe food options by supporting sustainable agriculture movements in your area.

Make it a point to only buy food from a source you know and trust, one that uses safe and non-toxic farming methods. This will do your health a major favor and support the small family farms in your area. You’ll receive nutritious food from a source that you can trust, and you’ll be supporting the honest work of a real family farm instead of an agri-business corporation.


EPA: CO2 is a deadly gas, but uranium, mercury, arsenic, rocket-fuel and drugs in drinking water is perfectly safe.

onourwayto2012
03-01-2010, 12:28 AM
Yuckkkk factor x 100!!!

gestaltdude
03-01-2010, 02:07 AM
Brings a whole new meaning to the phrase eat sh*t and die.

mizz420
03-01-2010, 02:23 AM
Thank fuck i don't live in America and i only eat from local organic sources anyway.

always_rebel
03-01-2010, 02:49 AM
As a result, farms and homes across the country have been unknowingly spreading hazardous chemicals and heavy metals on their fields, lawns and gardens.


:eek:




:eek:




:eek:

dude111
03-01-2010, 08:01 AM
Yuckkkk factor x 100!!!YUK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

http://img182.imageshack.us/img182/2434/pukelj5.gif

magenta_moonshadow
03-01-2010, 09:22 AM
DOUBLE YUKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK! :eek::eek::eek:

wakeup2nwo
03-01-2010, 10:41 AM
Brings a whole new meaning to the phrase eat sh*t and die.

Great! lol :D

gestaltdude
03-01-2010, 04:08 PM
Last time I checked into this thread there were 8 replies most expressing their disgust. Now there are only 7 (8 including this one).

Just wondering what happened to the other post or, given some of the threads I've seen today, the other poster.

hey_jude
03-01-2010, 04:31 PM
'tis the rapture people and posts are disappearing...


on topic ...the stuff you get at the 'food' warehouse is crap and there I believe is the proof. :eek:

mynameis
03-01-2010, 05:12 PM
All this is a hit piece on some conventional farming practices. Until there is proof that certain chemicals are not broken down by the time the food hits the dinner plate, the argument lacks reason.

mightiswrong
03-01-2010, 10:41 PM
The burden of proof is with you. Heavy metals do not break down so I guess you won't be able to proove its safe.

beldazar
04-01-2010, 12:25 AM
Brings a whole new meaning to the phrase eat sh*t and die.

LMAO!

I needed that after reading the first post! :eek:

mynameis
04-01-2010, 02:29 AM
The burden of proof is with you. Heavy metals do not break down so I guess you won't be able to proove its safe.

Burden yourself?

The implications of this fact cannot be overlooked. The human body naturally contains trace amounts of heavy metals, but when they accumulate faster than the body can excrete them, several serious health problems can follow, including cardiovascular and neurological disorders as well as kidney and liver damage. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, a division of the U.S. Public Health Service, cites fruit and grain consumption as the leading cause of lead exposure in the general population. Lead exposure has been proven to cause severe anemia and permanent brain damage. It's not yet clear whether organic (or conventional) soil contains enough of these metals to pose a genuine risk to human health. But continuing research on this topic weighs heavily on the future of what we've come to assume is a sustainable alternative to conventional agriculture.

No one is saying that organic soil has higher heavy-metal counts than conventional soil as a rule—scientists have not conducted enough research to make such a determination. Still, some evidence indicates that organic soil can, in some cases, be more contaminated. George Kuepper, an agriculture specialist with the National Center for Appropriate Technology, observed in a 2003 report that composting manure actually concentrates the fertilizer's metal content, which could lead to greater levels of the contaminants in organic soil.

Recent studies have lent Kuepper's concern tentative support. For example, in 2007, researchers conducted an analysis of wheat grown on various farms in Belgium; based on the results, they estimate that consumers of organically grown wheat take in more than twice as much lead, slightly more cadmium, and nearly equivalent levels of mercury as consumers of wheat grown on conventional farms.

Although the research here is also relatively thin, what has been done suggests that the problem of plant uptake is equally serious in both organic and conventional systems. For example, 14 percent to 28 percent of New Zealand's cattle (destined to be organic beef) were found to have kidney cadmium levels exceeding limits set by the New Zealand Department of Health because of a diet of plants grown in contaminated soil. Similarly, a 2007 study of Greek produce found that organic agriculture does not necessarily reduce the cadmium and lead levels in crops. As it turned out, "certified" organic cereals, leafy greens, pulses, and alcoholic beverages had slightly less heavy-metal contamination than conventional products, but "uncertified" organic products had "far larger concentrations" than conventional ones.

http://www.slate.com/id/2198756/

windeyaho
04-01-2010, 07:48 AM
Brings a whole new meaning to the phrase eat sh*t and die.

Okay, now my sides hurt from laughing! Needed that after reading the OP. Even birds teach their offspring not to poop in the nest. . . .

motleyhoo
04-01-2010, 07:58 AM
All this is a hit piece on some conventional farming practices. Until there is proof that certain chemicals are not broken down by the time the food hits the dinner plate, the argument lacks reason.

Are you serious? Do you have any common sense?

It has been known for many years that sewage sludge is highly toxic. That's because the chemicals that people dump down their drains - paint, varnish, gasoline, pesticides, used oil, etc., along with what corporations dump down their drains - list too long (but includes benzene, dioxin, PCBs, heavy metals, various carcinogens, pharmaceuticals) , gets concentrated during the water treatment process. Consequently, it has been illegal for years to spray sludge onto human food fields. But like with everything else that's going wrong with this sh!thole of a country, industry has bought off politicians to have the laws relaxed.

But hey, if you wanna pour this brew on your food, I ain't gonna stop ya. I just hope your life insurance is paid up.

.

sardonicus
04-01-2010, 08:06 AM
My goodness, no wonder people are getting sick and cancer is on the increase. Mass human cull in progress!! slow and secretive, but there all the same. 'They' are removing the vitamin and mineral content from mass produced 'food'; 'they' are also putting toxic chemicals and bacteria into our food supplies and rat poison (sodium flouride) in the drinking water...

Another fact: Canned food. Open a can of beans or whatever with a can opener (electric or conventional), then scrape some of the food from right around the edge of the tin where the lid was and look under a microscope - sharp shards of metal (tin?) which goes straight into your pan when you pour the contents in and then we eat the food containing the metal fragments.

Heavy metals are highly toxic and accumulate in the body. How are canned "food" producers allowed to get away with this?

mynameis
04-01-2010, 08:21 AM
Are you serious? Do you have any common sense?

It has been known for many years that sewage sludge is highly toxic. That's because the chemicals that people dump down their drains - paint, varnish, gasoline, pesticides, used oil, etc., along with what corporations dump down their drains - list too long (but includes benzene, dioxin, PCBs, heavy metals, various carcinogens, pharmaceuticals) , gets concentrated during the water treatment process. Consequently, it has been illegal for years to spray sludge onto human food fields. But like with everything else that's going wrong with this sh!thole of a country, industry has bought off politicians to have the laws relaxed.

But hey, if you wanna pour this brew on your food, I ain't gonna stop ya. I just hope your life insurance is paid up.

.

There is a large difference between treated and untreated sewage. You should know this already. If you have any studies with treated sewage showing heavy metal content as the slate reporter used toxicity in crops that are considered poisonous, I'd like to see it. If not then you have no evidence of anything nefarious going on. Using a gross conceptual error is not using reason.

mynameis
04-01-2010, 08:23 AM
My goodness, no wonder people are getting sick and cancer is on the increase. Mass human cull in progress!! slow and secretive, but there all the same. 'They' are removing the vitamin and mineral content from mass produced 'food'; 'they' are also putting toxic chemicals and bacteria into our food supplies and rat poison (sodium flouride) in the drinking water...

Another fact: Canned food. Open a can of beans or whatever with a can opener (electric or conventional), then scrape some of the food from right around the edge of the tin where the lid was and look under a microscope - sharp shards of metal (tin?) which goes straight into your pan when you pour the contents in and then we eat the food containing the metal fragments.

Heavy metals are highly toxic and accumulate in the body. How are canned "food" producers allowed to get away with this?

My theory is that vaccines and other foods, along with the natural environment are destroying the epigenetic make up of our DNA.

This is the best informative part of the article:

Mercury from tooth fillings incinerated with humans corpses and magnesium dust blown east from the Gobi Desert can now join heavy-metal residues wafting from smelting plants and arsenic from coal mines to contaminate soil. Needless to say, airborne contaminants don't land on conventional farms alone. As atmospheric deposition grows more widespread, the difference between organic and nonorganic farming will become ever smaller.

romas
04-01-2010, 12:10 PM
Guys tell me what would be the sollution? Continue dump it into the ocean? All I see is reactionary bullshit here, no sollutions.

ennui
04-01-2010, 12:15 PM
They use sewage sludge in the UK. Stinks to high heaven when they spread it on the fields. The smell killed my friends cat.

motleyhoo
05-01-2010, 06:40 AM
There is a large difference between treated and untreated sewage. You should know this already. If you have any studies with treated sewage showing heavy metal content as the slate reporter used toxicity in crops that are considered poisonous, I'd like to see it. If not then you have no evidence of anything nefarious going on. Using a gross conceptual error is not using reason.

Most sludge is actually not treated, that's why it's called sludge. It comes from residential and commercial septic systems.

As for treated sludge - it's the water that is treated, and the sludge is what is left over. That's why all the bad stuff is concentrated in it.

There is no common sense way to rationalize pouring sewage sludge on food crops, and no, most of the toxic chemicals and heavy metals do not break down in the few number of months that the crops are produced. In fact, as more and more sludge is poured on the same fields many of these toxic substances build up because they don't breakdown in terms of years.

.

mynameis
05-01-2010, 01:21 PM
Most sludge is actually not treated, that's why it's called sludge. It comes from residential and commercial septic systems.

As for treated sludge - it's the water that is treated, and the sludge is what is left over. That's why all the bad stuff is concentrated in it.

There is no common sense way to rationalize pouring sewage sludge on food crops, and no, most of the toxic chemicals and heavy metals do not break down in the few number of months that the crops are produced. In fact, as more and more sludge is poured on the same fields many of these toxic substances build up because they don't breakdown in terms of years.

.

Then you need to explain why this process exists? Just because you clearly say it doesn't?

# [PDF]
Heavy metal removal from municipal sewage sludges by phytoextractio
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
by M Pogrzeba - Cited by 2 - Related articles
Heavy metal removal from municipal sewage sludges by phytoextraction. M. Pogrzeba*, R. Kucharski*, A.Sas-Nowosielska*, E. Malkowski**, K. Krynski*, J. M. ...
www.containment.fsu.edu/cd/content/pdf/475.pdf - Similar
#
Principle and Process of Heavy Metal Removal from Sewage Sludge ...
by S Yoshizaki - 2000 - Cited by 39 - Related articles - All 5 versions
The sufficient removal of heavy metals from sewage sludge remains to be achieved. Heavy metals that exist on the cell surfaces of the microorganisms in the ...
pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/jtext?esthag/34/i08/abs/es990979s
#
Enhanced heavy metals removal without phosphorus loss from ...
by A Ito - Cited by 1 - Related articles
Enhanced heavy metals removal from anaerobically digested sewage sludge. Water Science & Technology—WST | 58.1 | 2008 ...
www.iwaponline.com/wst/05801/0201/058010201.pdf - Similar
#
Science Links Japan | Heavy Metal Removal from Sewage Sludge by ...
by K TOMITA - 2002
Abstract;Removal of several harmful heavy metal elements which obstruct utilizing as compost from sewage sludge by acidic leaching and electrolysis was ...
sciencelinks.jp/j-east/article/200221/000020022102A0824120.php - Cached
#
Removal of heavy metals from contaminated sewage sludge using ...
by D Del Mundo Dacera - 2008 - Cited by 7 - Related articles
The environmental benefits derived from using citric acid in the removal of heavy metals from contaminated sewage sludge have made it promising as an ...
linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0960852407003082 - Similar
#
Removal of Heavy Metals from Sewage Sludge Used as Soil Fertilizer ...
Removal of Heavy Metals from Sewage Sludge Used as Soil Fertilizer - This work has examined sewage sludge of the following heavy metal conc ...
www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1P3-798938541.html - Cached - Similar
#
REMOVAL OF HEAVY METALS FROM SEWAGE SLUDGE BY ACID TREATMENT ...
Sludge samples were found to contain significant amounts of heavy metals (Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn) and were subjected to acid treatment using either hyd...
www.informaworld.com/smpp/.../content~db=all~content=a713629690
#
Principle and process of heavy metal removal from sewage sludge
by S YOSHIZAKI - 2000 - Cited by 39 - Related articles - All 5 versions
The sufficient removal of heavy metals from sewage sludge remains to be achieved. Heavy metals that exist on the cell surfaces of the microorganisms in the ...
cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=1329482
#
Removal of Nonferrous Heavy Metals from Industrial Sewage Using ...
by VI Zakharova - 2001 - Cited by 1 - Related articles - All 4 versions
REMOVAL OF NONFERROUS HEAVY METALS FROM INDUSTRIAL SEWAGE. 351 which corresponded to a TDEC of 6.77 mg/ml. The minimum concentration of nickel in the ...
www.springerlink.com/index/K22450273346216J.pdf - Similar
#
Removal of heavy metals from sewage sludge by acid treatment.
by C Naoum - 2001 - Cited by 13 - Related articles
Removal of heavy metals from sewage sludge by acid treatment. Naoum C, Fatta D, Haralambous KJ, Loizidou M. Department of Chemical Engineering, ...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11460338

302 Moved