Hi Ed

>Also a Mother Jones article a little while ago citing this -  fertilizer
>being used as a carrier for cheap disposal of toxics. Spread it all over our
>farmlands in small concentrations instead of paying to have it properly
>disposed of. (Yikes!)

Yep. Most of the original investigations and publication were done by 
the Seattle Times. I'll post some links below.

> I think it's time to start looking seriously at the role of  seedcake
>pellets that emerge from cold presses as hard pellets, with probably twice
>the oil content of those from solvent extraction facilities,  ready for use
>as organic fertilizer. All the organic folks that are running diesels in
>their operations should, as a matter of principle, be integrating these
>biofuels and biolubricants and organic seedcake pellets ideas into their
>work.

Hear hear - we all like to say how nice and green biofuels are, but 
there's not enough thought given to maintaining the fertility of the 
soils that produce them.

<snip>

>another. And we see the results in terms of our health. Sooner - or later.
>
>But I digress...

Not a digression - everything's connected to everything else. There's 
not enough thought given to this either, IMO. Rising tides of asthma, 
bronchitis, chest complaints, allergies, etc etc etc - the issues you 
raise - were very much at issue in Hong Kong and its failure to deal 
with rising air-pollution, mainly diesel pollution; people were 
leaving, tourists weren't coming, businesses were relocating, 
thousands of people were meeting premature deaths every year, and 
biodiesel could have very largely fixed that. I understand nothing's 
changed in the last couple of years. In other words it'll have got 
worse.
http://journeytoforever.org/biodiesel_hk.html

Toxic fertilizer refs:

The Seattle Times, Local News, Friday, July 04, 1997:
Throughout the country, example after example of hazardous wastes
being turned into fertilizer

The Seattle Times, Local News, Thursday, March 26, 1998:
Toxic waste: 270 million pounds on farm fields

http://www.ewg.org/pressstories/seattletimes01292001.html
Take toxins out of fertilizer, 29 Jan 2001

http://www.seventhgen.com/html/recentnews.html#story01
A Fateful Harvest And A Cautionary Tale
Faithful readers will remember that a few issues back we reviewed a 
new book called Fateful Harvest, the True Story of a Small Town, a 
Global Industry, and a Toxic Secret, by Duff Wilson. The book follows 
an investigative trail of secrets and sickness from a single small 
town to the headquarters of global fertilizer companies that are 
covertly adding toxic waste to their products. It's a stunning tale 
and one that's really about much more than fertilizer.

http://pirg.org/toxics/reports/wastelands/index.html#exec
Waste Lands: The Threat Of Toxic Fertilizer

http://ens.lycos.com/ens/nov99/1999l-11-24-02.html
Environmental News Service -- Smelter Toxics Served at Dinner via 
Crop Fertilizers

http://ens.lycos.com/ens/may2001/2001L-05-07-06.html
Environment News Service: Toxic Wastes Found in Fertilizers

Toxic Waste in Fertilizer Main Page
http://www.watoxics.org/tf.htm

Duff Wilson's "Fateful Harvest" Book Release and Promotional Book Tour
http://www.watoxics.org/tfdw.htm

Background Information on Toxic Waste in Fertilizer
http://www.watoxics.org/tfbk.htm

Public Health and Environmental Concerns
http://www.watoxics.org/tfh.htm

Washington Fertilizer Politics
http://www.watoxics.org/tfp.htm

Farmers' Stories
http://www.watoxics.org/tff.htm

Media Reports and Other Resources
http://www.watoxics.org/tfm.htm

Toxic Waste in Fertilizer Action Alert
http://www.watoxics.org/uaNatFert.htm

Keith Addison
Journey to Forever
Handmade Projects
Tokyo
http://journeytoforever.org/


>Edward Beggs
>www.biofuels.ca
>
>
> > From: Keith Addison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Reply-To: biofuel@yahoogroups.com
> > Date: Wed, 09 Jan 2002 13:48:24 +0900
> > To: biofuel@yahoogroups.com
> > Subject: Re: [biofuel] Solid catalyst,
> >
> > "goat industries" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >> Yes, Dana, there are people interested in finding greener 
>recipes for making
> >> biodiesel. They do seem to exist but are generally highly 
>guarded industrial
> >> secrets. I got a bit disallusioned by the polluting effect of the basic
> >> methanol/lye method as it produces a lot of mirky water in the refining
> >> process which is a problem to serious biodiesel producers as the local
> >> environment agency (UK) is highly officious and very fond of 
>imposing large
> >> fines on businesses that cause pollution. I am currently researching other
> >> methods.
> >
> > Sounds like it's your highly officious local UK environment agency
> > you should be getting a bit disillusioned with rather than the
> > polluting effect of the method, which was discussed here a month or
> > two ago and would seem to be more of a molehill than a mountain. Is
> > it really worse than soapy residues etc from dishwasher, laundry
> > detergents, bathwater? Aleks detailed the contents of the waste water
> > (pretty innocuous) and said there's no need to be saintlier than the
> > Pope. Keep 2nd and 3rd wash water for next-batch first wash; dilute
> > first-wash water and offer it to your lawn - try a small patch first,
> > but prolly neither lawn nor moles will mind, might even appreciate
> > it. Nothing you don't find in fertiliser bags. You can find a helluva
> > lot worse in fertiliser bags: 6.2 million pounds of lead compounds,
> > 1.3 million pounds of chromium compounds, 233,000 pounds of cadmium
> > compounds, 212,000 pounds of nickel compounds, 16,000 pounds of
> > mercury compounds and 223 pounds of arsenic compounds (dioxins not
> > measured) supplied in US fertilizer bags in 2000. Plenty of real
> > problems with water pollution in the UK to be concerned about.
> >
> > "UK's polluted rivers named" - "WWF says the relevant government
> > agencies do not have the money to monitor fresh water properly, and
> > are often powerless to act even when they find problems."
> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1285000/1285883.stm
> >
> > Should add this:
> >
> > "Aerosol Pollution Could Drain Earth's Water Cycle", San Diego,
> > California, December 7, 2001 (ENS) -- Pollution may be seriously
> > weakening the Earth's water cycle, reducing rainfall and threatening
> > fresh water supplies. A new study by researchers at the Scripps
> > Institution of Oceanography suggests that tiny particles of soot and
> > other pollutants are having a far greater effect on the planet's
> > hydrological cycle than previously realized, directly affecting fresh
> > water availability and quality. The aerosols are a mixture of
> > sulfates, nitrates, organic particles, fly ash, and mineral dust,
> > formed by fossil fuel combustion and burning of forests and other
> > biomass.
> > http://ens-news.com/ens/dec2001/2001L-12-07-06.html
> >
> > Using biodiesel gives substantial reductions of unburned hydrocarbons
> > (-93%), carbon monoxide (-50%), and particulate matter (-30%), ie
> > soot - NBB. So is using biodiesel rather than dinodiesel helping the
> > water situation more or less than your washwater is polluting it,
> > d'you think?
> >
> > Keith Addison
> > Journey to Forever
> > Handmade Projects
> > Tokyo
> > http://journeytoforever.org/


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