VIROTECH - COMPOST TOILETS

  • Home
  • Household Systems
  • Tiny Homes & Weekenders
  • Commercial Applications
  • Contact
  • About Us
  • Home
  • Household Systems
  • Tiny Homes & Weekenders
  • Commercial Applications
  • Contact
  • About Us

Blogometry

Greywater and Composting Toilets

8/12/2022

2 Comments

 
One of the biggest obstacles some people face when they decide to install a waterless composting toilet in their household is gaining council approval, but it's rarely the composting toilet system that's the issue - it's far more likely to be the council's attitude to greywater systems.

If you are not flushing toilets, you don't need a septic system. There is no blackwater, so you should be able to install a simple, inexpensive system to reuse or dispose of the greywater from your kitchen, laundry and bathroom. But some councils can make life difficult.

To cut to the chase, homes with compost toilets are not very common, so council officers are often not familiar with greywater only systems and the regulations and guidelines that govern their approval. They lack the training needed to understand the basic principles and properly assess a system for approval, so they tend to err on the side of caution and decline the application. Even a site specific system designed by a qualified professional (geo-technical engineer) may not gain approval due to the council officer's lack of knowledge and fear of the unknown.

To justify their objections, some council officers argue that kitchen wastewater is deemed 'blackwater' and therefore requires extra treatment. That's not exactly true. 

AS NZS 1547-2012 defines greywater as “The domestic wastes from a bath, shower, basin, laundry, and kitchen, but excluding toilet and urinal wastes.” 

Many of the regulations, guidelines, codes of practice, etc that council officers reference are complex and ambiguous, which just adds to the confusion. What should be a fairly simple task becomes an excercise in regulatory gymnastics. Simple greywater systems can be approved by your local council, but plotting a path through the current regulatory maze requires extraordinary level of referencing and cross-referencing, which most council officers simply don't have time for. VIROtech has been working with stakeholders behind the scenes to address this issue by advocating for a training program to be rolled out to provide council officers with the knowledge they need to properly assess system applications.

The basic principles in dealing with greywater​ are:
  • Put it straight into the ground.
  • DON'T put it in a tank - it will just smell bad
  • Install a grease trap on the kitchen outlet
  • Use a pre-filter to extend the life of your leach field
  • Ensure the leach field is of sufficient size, and in an appropriate location.
It is that simple. Or at least it should be.

Before I go any further, it is important to reiterate that greywater systems are very site specific. Or more accurately, simple greywater systems are very site specific. There are some off-the-shelf 'accredited' one-size-fits-all greywater systems available on the market, but these tend to be way more complex and expensive the most households need.

Your greywater system must be designed to suit your specific household, soil type, climate and proximity to water courses, but if you have a composting toilet it could be as simple as a grease trap and some perforated pipe buried 100mm below the surface. ​​If your block is suitable, the greywater can be used to irrigate trees and shrubs, but we don't advise using it on your vegetable garden.

Above ground irrigation systems (drippers, sprinklers, etc) are generally not approved by local councils without tertiary level treatment using complicated and expensive equipment.

The diagram below shows a typical system design for a household with waterless composting toilets using standard plumbing fittings, but is only appropriate if the block meets certain criteria regarding soils, slope, water courses, etc. Most of the system can be built using commonly available plumbing materials.

https://www.virotech.com.au/greywater.html​ 
Picture
Application

Your on-site sewerage management systems (OSMS) application will typically need to be accompanied by:
  • Site plan – to scale showing buildings, OSMS plumbing, water courses, etc
  • System specifications – accreditations, standards compliance, etc of components
  • Site assessment –details of the climate, geology, hydrogeology, topography, soil composition and vegetation – normally done by a qualified geotechnical engineer
  • Statement - the number of persons residing, or likely to reside on the premises, and any other factors relevant to the capacity of the proposed OSMS.
  • Operation and maintenance details - operation and maintenance requirements for the OSMS and any professional servicing arrangements.
Your application will be assessed with reference to:
  • Environment and health protection at the site
  • Guidelines and directions – relevant policies, guidelines and directions
  • Standards to be met for installation, maintenance and servicing

The area of land required to disperse the effluent – the effluent disposal area (EDA) or leach field - will be determined by site characteristics described in the LCA using a ‘water balance’ calculation –a ‘water in/water out’ calculation based on factors such as the volume of effluent, soil porosity, slope, vegetation, and local rainfall patterns. The location of the EDA will be determined by factors such as soil types, slope and proximity to dams, water courses and boundaries.

Key Points

OSMS are site specific and there are numerous factors at play in determining the appropriate size and design of your OSMS.
  • Site characteristics
  • Size of household
  • Council policies
  • Council officers’ interpretation of policies and regulations
  • Type of toilets installed
We suggest you start by consulting a suitably qualified local geotechnical engineer. A locally based geo-tech will normally be familiar with your local council and its policies and preferences regarding OSMS.

DOWNLOAD the FREE VIROtech Green Greywater Guide HERE
2 Comments

Buckets, batches and the collection cult

10/8/2021

0 Comments

 
The digital environment opens endless opportunities to share and gather knowledge - some good, some bad - and to observe modern culture in evolution.

Conversations about compost toilets lately seem to be dominated by discussions about various batch style compost systems - many of them DIY. Everything from a bucket in a wooden box, to big wheelie bin systems you roll out into a paddock. They're all the same - they collect waste in a container, they have a fan-driven ventilation system and an excess fluid drain. They are not composting toilets - they are waste collection systems.

Conversations on the topic, particularly on social media platforms, have been hijacked lately by the 'cult of collection' - conversations based on the premise that compost toilet systems are only ever waste collection systems in various forms and degrees of sophistication. Wrong.

REAL composting toilets don't just collect waste, they process it. A continuous process composting system produces finished, innocuous, odourless compost that can be easily reintroduced to the landscape.

Batch systems certainly have a place, and they do serve a purpose in some circumstances. They're generally pretty cheap and 'good enough' for convenience or ocassional use - 'good enough' for the weekender. But in a permanent family household you'll soon get tired of moving, storing and emptying containers of waste.

The good news is, you don't have to!

A good compost toilet system introduces oxygen into the pile to create a healthy oxygen-rich aerobic environment in which aerobic bacteria thrives. When aerobic bacteria breaks the waste down it gives off water vapour and carbon dioxide - both odourless. A good 'continuous process' system can reduce waste to as little as 5% of its original volume, tranforming it into odourless, pathogen-free material that resembles rich dark soil. 

The first Clivus Multrum compost toilet system was built in 1939 by Rikard Lindstrom, but he didn't patent it until the 1960s. Rikard's beautifully simple design lives on in modern Clivus Multrum systems - it's hard to improve on perfect. A chamber full of loose organic matter (generally wood shavings) with vents & baffles designed to encourage air circulation and create the perfect aerobic environment for a highly efficient composting process.

Add some wood shavings regularly, rake the pile once a month. That's it. Job done.

VIROtech have been supplying Australians with Clivus Multrum composting toilet systems since 1987. Of the hundreds of Clivus Multrum owners across Australia, not one has ever contacted us with a problem. Not many products can claim a record like that.

https://www.virotech.com.au/clivus-multrum.html 

0 Comments

    Author

    Grant Webster
    Over 35 years of practical experience with compost toilet systems.

    Archives

    December 2022
    August 2021

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed