In this Nov. 17, 2016 photo, Gavin McNicol, Junior Jules Francois and Denis Darline are photographed at SOIL Haiti’s composting site near Cap-Ha&

In this Nov. 17, 2016 photo, Gavin McNicol, Junior Jules Francois and Denis Darline are photographed at SOIL Haiti’s composting site near Cap-Ha&

‘Mountains beyond mountains’: How human waste (that’s right, poop!) can be transformed into safe and useful resources

I arrived in Juneau last summer with mixed emotions. I was excited to start a new life in Southeast, but I’d also just left behind a project I cared a lot about.

Inspired by the book “Mountains Beyond Mountains” by Tracy Kidder (2003), I’d joined a research project after finishing my PhD to study the operations of an organization called Sustainable Organic Integrated Livelihoods (SOIL), that provides an innovative sanitation service to communities in Haiti. I spent several months in Haiti, experienced SOIL’s work first-hand, and befriended an international team who are showing that human waste (that’s right, poop!) can be transformed into safe and useful resources. My work in Haiti ended last summer, but I’ve since discovered that there are similar unmet sanitation needs here in Alaska.

Ecological sanitation (EcoSan) involves changing the way we think about flows of waste materials from linear paths, into cycles. This shift isn’t new. We’ve done it in the context of industrial waste, glass and aluminum recycling, and increasingly for food waste composting. EcoSan extends the principle a little further and recognizes that human waste contains water, energy, carbon and nutrient resources too. EcoSan, as with other recycling, isn’t a one-fits-all approach. EcoSan solutions can draw on different technologies to achieve the same goals of nutrient recapture, energy production, and water use reduction. However, one barrier to implementation is the fact that EcoSan solutions, as with sanitation generally, have a public perception problem.

People don’t want to talk about human waste. Poop carries with it a certain stigma — referred to by sanitation geeks as the “ick-factor” — which crosses cultures globally, rich and poor. This reaction has plenty of rational basis. Untreated human waste can contain unhealthy pathogens, and can smell pretty bad too. But the “ick” response can also be misguided, reactionary and even harmful, when it blocks implementation of smarter sanitation options, or where our collective embarrassment means we end up flushing the whole conversation down the toilet.

To say this taboo is harmful is not hyperbole. In international development sanitation was, for decades, subsumed within the more palatable objective of increasing access to clean water. By 2015, about 91 percent of the world’s population had access to improved drinking water while access to improved sanitation had stagnated around 60 percent (See attribution below). The excellent book “The Last Taboo” (Black & Falkner, 2008) provides the whole scoop on the ways that taboos around human waste have led us to the global sanitation crisis. Around 2 million people — mostly women and children — still die each year from preventable diarrhea.

Most people lacking improved sanitation live in rapidly growing informal settlements in the developing world. SOIL Haiti’s operation near the city of Cap-Haïtien primarily serves those in the poorest slums, such as Shada, a neighborhood that forever altered my perception of the expression “concrete jungle.” However, the principles of ecological sanitation that drives SOIL’s work are universal, and the last few months have affirmed this as I’ve learned about water and sanitation in Alaska.

A substantial amount of work has been undertaken to describe, and start to address, the sanitation disparities on the Last Frontier. About 18 percent of rural Alaskans do not have improved sanitation. Within those households, children’s health outcomes are poorer, and rates of respiratory infections are higher. Conventional piped and water-based systems are costly, especially in permafrost. One piped installation in Buckland was estimated to cost around $500,000 per household. These facts lead me to ask whether EcoSan principles have been, or could be, explored here in Alaska?

In Haiti, SOIL combines dry household bucket toilets (container-based sanitation) with composting of the collected material at a separate facility. Their sizable operation employs local people and produces a sanitary, sellable, compost fertilizer. SOIL’s services have grown successfully in a country where improved sanitation access sits around 28 percent, where flooding can make a movable bucket toilet very handy, and where soil erosion has reduced agricultural fertility. EcoSan in Alaska would look very different — freezing temperatures present new challenges — but the sustainability of remote villages may benefit from locally defined solutions that can recycle nutrients, conserve liquid water for drinking, and even produce heat.

Further reading on rural sanitation

UN, 2018 (https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/water-and-sanitation/)

Penn HJF, Loring PA, Schnabel WE (2017) “Diagnosing water security in the rural North with an environmental security framework.” Journal of Environmental Management.

Hennessy TW, Ritter T, Holman RC, et al (2008) “The relationship between in-home water service and the risk of respiratory tract, skin, and gastrointestinal tract infections among rural Alaska Natives.” American Journal of Public Health.

United States Arctic Research Commission (USARC) (2015) “Alaskan Water and Sanitation Retrospective


• Dr. Gavin McNicol is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Alaska Southeast and lives in Juneau. “Sustainable Alaska” is a monthly column, appearing on the first Friday of every month. It’s written by UAS Sustainability Committee members who wanted to promote sustainability. The views expressed here do not necessarily represent the views of the University of Alaska Southeast.


More in Neighbors

Maj. Gina Halverson is co-leader of The Salvation Army Juneau Corps. (Robert DeBerry/The Salvation Army)
Living and Growing: “Don’t cry because it’s over, smile because it happened.”

Ever have to say goodbye unexpectedly? A car accident, a drug overdose,… Continue reading

Visitors look at an art exhibit by Eric and Pam Bealer at Alaska Robotics that is on display until Sunday. (Photo courtesy of the Sitka Conservation Society)
Neighbors briefs

Art show fundraiser features works from Alaska Folk Festival The Sitka Conservation… Continue reading

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski meets with Thunder Mountain High School senior Elizabeth Djajalie in March in Washington, D.C., when Djajalie was one of two Alaskans chosen as delegates for the Senate Youth Program. (Photo courtesy U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s office)
Neighbors: Juneau student among four National Honor Society Scholarship Award winners

TMHS senior Elizabeth Djajalie selected from among nearly 17,000 applicants.

The 2024 Alaska Junior Duck Stamp Contest winning painting of an American Wigeon titled “Perusing in the Pond” by Jade Hicks, a student at Thunder Mountain High School. (Photo courtesy of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)
THMS student Jade Hicks wins 2024 Alaska Junior Duck Stamp Contest

Jade Hicks, 18, a student at Thunder Mountain High School, took top… Continue reading

(Photo courtesy of The Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska)
Neighbors: Tunic returned to the Dakhl’aweidí clan

After more than 50 years, the Wooch dakádin kéet koodás’ (Killerwhales Facing… Continue reading

A handmade ornament from a previous U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree. (Photo courtesy of U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree)
Neighbors briefs

Ornaments sought for 2024 U.S. Capitol Christmas Tree The Alaska Region of… Continue reading

(Photo by Gina Delrosario)
Living and Growing: Divine Mercy Sunday

Part one of a two-part series

(City and Borough of Juneau photo)
Neighbors Briefs

Registration for Parks & Rec summer camps opens April 1 The City… Continue reading

Easter eggs in their celebratory stage, before figuring out what to do once people have eaten their fill. (Photo by Depositphotos via AP)
Gimme A Smile: Easter Eggs — what to do with them now?

From Little League practice to practicing being POTUS, there’s many ways to get cracking.

A fruit salad that can be adjusted to fit the foods of the season. (Photo by Patty Schied)
Cooking for Pleasure: A Glorious Fruit Salad for a Company Dinner

Most people don’t think of a fruit salad as a dessert. This… Continue reading