Mapping An Insect Brain, Climate Education, Audubon Name, Wastewater Methane. March 31, 2023, Part 2
Science Friday
Science Friday and WNYC Studios
4.4 • 6.4K Ratings
🗓️ 31 March 2023
⏱️ 47 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | This is Science Friday. I'm Kathleen Davis. |
| 0:03.3 | And I'm Shayla Farsan. We're sitting in for Ira Flato this week. |
| 0:06.7 | Later in the hour, how an activist is challenging what climate education should look like. |
| 0:12.2 | And the National Audubon Society announced it'll be keeping its name despite it being named after an enslaver. |
| 0:20.4 | What that means for the birding community and what local |
| 0:23.0 | chapters are doing about it. But first, we recently told you about researchers working to extract |
| 0:29.4 | health data from your toilet. Right. But now it's time to talk toilets a bit further downstream, |
| 0:36.6 | specifically what happens after you flush the toilet. |
| 0:40.3 | In most cities, once you flush, that water and whatever else is in it flows to a water treatment |
| 0:46.4 | plant. Once it's there, it goes through a bunch of different chemical and biological processes, |
| 0:52.0 | which clean it up and make it safe to drink again. But a recent paper |
| 0:55.9 | in the journal Environmental Science and Technology finds that some of those sewage plants may be having |
| 1:01.6 | a greater impact on the climate than we thought. Joining me to talk about that now is Mark Zondlow. |
| 1:07.9 | He's a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Princeton University and one of the authors of that report. |
| 1:14.6 | Welcome to the program. Thank you. All right. Let's start with just some of the basics here. Why do sewage plants produce methane? |
| 1:21.8 | So there's a lot of organic matter and waste, as one can imagine, and that gets collected by the sewage treatment |
| 1:27.8 | plant. And the goal of the plant is to clean the water, to put it back into the waterways, |
| 1:33.1 | to make a healthy environment. But as part of that process, that organic material, that waste that |
| 1:39.4 | comes into the plant, that carbon has to go somewhere and anaerobic conditions produce methane, |
| 1:45.4 | and that's where the methane is coming from and can happen in many different sectors of plant. |
| 1:50.3 | It can be clarifiers. It can be the sledge tanks. It can be the digesters. It can come from |
| 1:56.1 | so many different components. Any inefficiency in the plant that creates these anaerobic conditions |
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