[Ccpg] John Todd and the Los Osos Waste WATER Project
Wesley Roe and Santa Barbara Permaculture Network
lakinroe at silcom.com
Fri Apr 18 20:27:27 PDT 2008
>Subject: [CAUCUS] John Todd and the Los Osos Waste Water Project
>
>
>Last February, John Todd, President of Todd Ecological Research and
>Design Inc., a leading firm in the development of ecological water
>treatment technologies (see below) came to SLO County to speak with
>the County's Los Osos Wastewater Project team, the public, and other
>governmental agencies, regarding innovative, sustainable technology
>in San Luis Obispo County, including the Los Osos Wastewater
>Project. He is preparing to return to our area for a brief visit
>May 22 or 23, to meet with the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC)
>for the Los Osos Wastewater Project and others.
>The county has a golden opportunity to lead the way toward a
>sustainable future, with a project like this. If you see the wisdom
>in this type of project, please show support for it and talk about
>it to those you know in the county.
>I believe this type of project will go a long way toward healing the
>community of Los Osos as well as mending the relationship of Los
>Osos with the rest of the county.
>
>
>Judy Vick
Thanks Judy, HopeDance also did a story about his son's visit to Los
Osos. John did not come. His son Jonathan came. This is great that
the grandmaster John [Todd] will be here [in SLO]!!!
Read enviro freelancer Kathy Johnston's article in HopeDance here:
<http://www.hopedance.org/cms/content/view/462/107/>http://www.hopedance.org/cms/content/view/462/107/
>
>[]
>
>[]
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>CNN caught up with John Todd in Vermont to talk Eco Machines, energy
>and building a better future...
>art.todd.jpg
>
>John Todd's Eco Machines can grow foods and fuel, restore
>environments and treat waste.
>[]
>
>CNN: John, can you tell us a bit about your career and what drives you?
>John Todd: I really began my career as what we call a "doom watch
>scientist," discovering how pesticides were harming our
>environments. At one point I became so discouraged by what I was
>finding that I said, can we not take this knowledge and flip it on
>its head? Can we not learn what a forest or a lake knows, and
>convert it into technologies that in the future would feed us,
>provide our energy, transform our waste and even repair our damaged
>environments? I knew that there are efficiencies, ingenuity and
>symbiotic relationships in nature that are so powerful -- if we
>could just decode its language we could change the way we do things.
>CNN: Are you a designer or an ecologist?
>Todd: I'm first and foremost a biological explorer. I've looked all
>over the world for answers. Secondly, I'm an ecological designer,
>and by that I mean I attempt to work with constellations of nature
>to create technological forms. So I'm part engineer, part ecologist,
>part inventor, really.
>CNN: Why are inventions like the Eco Machine so important?
>Todd: As we enter an age of limits we're going to have to rely more
>and more on nature's wisdom to solve the problems that humans are
>facing. The water problem is one of the biggest of these issues.
>CNN: What can your Eco Machines do?
>Todd: We have created Eco Machines that generate fuels, grow foods,
>repair damaged environments, regulate climate in buildings and treat
>waste, including some very dangerous wastes.
>CNN: How did you figure out the particular qualities of the
>organisms to create your living machines?
>Todd: I've had a lifetime's experience in designing living machines
>to treat sewage, grow foods, generate fuels, repair damaged
>environments and regulate climates in buildings.
>Basically they're driven by sunlight. Higher plants provide a lot of
>the surface area -- via their roots -- for the beneficial organisms.
>They work in much the same way that a marsh or a forest works. We
>substitute nature's wisdom for heavy duty engineering, chemicals and
>massive amounts of energy.
>CNN: What potential do you think Eco Machines hold?
>Todd: Our vision is to use Eco Machines to allow the world to shift
>to a more scarce petroleum era, to substitute long-distance
>transport of materials and energy. It has tremendous possibilities
>for transitioning to a post-petroleum era. It's perhaps one of the
>least-valued strategies to us in the future.
>CNN: How do Eco Machines compare to traditional treatment works in
>terms of energy consumption?
>Todd: The living machines can be designed to use only solar energy.
>If you have a very small footprint, we can pump air into the tanks
>with electrical blowers to substitute for space -- that's the
>trade-off. The blowers are several horsepower, but it's far less
>than conventional technology. But increasingly we're learning to do
>more with less as we learn about nature's capabilities. For example,
>one could calculate a facility's electrical needs and install a windmill.
>CNN: To what level do you think your vision will be accepted?
>Todd: Whether we're working in Vermont, China or the Caribbean,
>we're finding that once people become familiar with this approach,
>they get really turned on. Most of the activity is happening in
>resorts that want to become green and developers who want to change,
>whether we're talking about apartments in London, England or a
>resort in Hawaii.
>CNN: What is the craziest idea you've ever had?
>Todd: I've had a lot of crazy ideas! Right now, I'd like to be able
>to clean up the canals of Venice and Lake Pontchartrain in New
>Orleans; I want to build an ocean ark, a wind- and solar
>electric-powered ship that doesn't pollute and takes passengers
>between continents; and I'm very anxious to get involved in large
>scale land restoration. I'm actually getting started doing that.
>CNN: What do you hope things will look like 20 years from now?
>Todd: I would like to go to any city and find that the buildings
>were the scaffolding for all kinds of living materials, which would
>be purifying the air and even providing foods for people. It would
>be very exciting; it would be very beautiful. The landscapes of the
>future would be very diverse -- trees, livestock, animals, crops,
>wild areas, all woven together. Most foods could be grown locally,
>so that things that we trade are things we really revere, like good
>wines, fabulous coffee or incredible olive oil, that kind of thing.
>CNN: Do you think we can build a better future for the human race?
>Todd: If we redesigned our infrastructures in the broadest sense
>through ecological design we could reduce the negative human
>footprint on the planet by about 90% and still have thriving
>civilizations. We know we can do it, it's just getting from here to
>there. That's going to be the greatest challenge of the 21st
>century.
><http://edition.cnn.com/2007/BUSINESS/08/30/todd.interview/index.html#>E-mail
>to a friend
>E-mail to a friend
>
>
>
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