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Re-emergence of dry toilets and fecal nutrient reuse in M'zab cities
Author(s) -
Sara Bekaddour,
Nassim Aït-Mouheb,
Tarik Hartani
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of water sanitation and hygiene for development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2408-9362
pISSN - 2043-9083
DOI - 10.2166/washdev.2021.115
Subject(s) - sanitation , toilet , reuse , environmental science , population , fertilizer , sustainability , environmental engineering , geography , water resource management , business , environmental protection , waste management , engineering , ecology , environmental health , biology , medicine
In the M'zab valley, dry toilets represent an ancestral dry sanitation system, serving as a source of fertilizer thanks to human excrement valorization. However, in the 20th century, local populations began to shun these systems. The objective of this article is to illustrate the importance of dry toilets on agricultural and environmental scales in ancient M'Zab, and the renewal of these systems in response to sanitation problems in the oasis after their decline. The hypothesis put forward is that dry toilets can act as a complementary system to conventional sanitation systems. Data were collected through interviews with the local population. Our results show that the use of dry toilets, and the resulting use of human excrement as fertilizer, has gone through three phases. First, a phase of strong recycling dynamics, followed by a second phase of decline in dry toilet use which is linked to the discovery of the Albian aquifer and flush toilet adoption. The third phase is characterized by dry toilet reuse in response to oasis degradation caused by sanitation and environmental problems. Some oasesians have taken the initiative to revert to dry toilets to ensure oasis system sustainability and to revive the practice of recycling human waste.

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