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This post is part of the series on space topics. This post is not the last word on this topic. The usual caveats apply. I’m curious if you have strong opinions on different fuel mixes. A growing Mars base has a prodigious need for power. I’ve previously written two posts on powering the lunar base. The first explores solar power towers and thermal storage. The second reveals that beaming power to the lunar base region with microwaves from Earth is by far the cheapest, most flexible option – for operations on the Earth facing side of the Moon.  This, incidentally, …
7 months ago

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More from Casey Handmer's blog

Why am I searched every time I go to Australia?

The Australian Border Force won’t stop searching me and my personal devices when I visit Australia. Despite being an Australian citizen, under Australian law, I have zero recourse to this continued flagrant invasion of my privacy. After two years of harassment I am publicizing this as a considered next step in an effort to make it stop.  This is somewhat different from my usual articles about space, energy, and technology – we will return to that theme shortly. As far as possible, I will relate only facts and keep editorializing to a minimum. I will update this post as the …

a month ago 8 votes
To Conquer the Primary Energy Consumption Layer of Our Entire Civilization

[Originally posted on the Terraform blog April 3, 2025.] Three years ago we set out to make cheap synthetic natural gas from sunlight and air. At the time I didn’t fully appreciate that we had kicked off the process of recompiling the foundation layer of our entire industrial stack.  Last year, we made cheap pipeline grade natural gas from sunlight and air and expanded our hydrocarbon fuel road map to include methanol, a versatile liquid fuel and chemical precursor for practically every other kind of oil-derived chemical on the market. Unlimited synthetic methane and methanol underpinning global energy supply is a good start, but …

2 months ago 26 votes
Long duration propellant stability in Starship

Some ideas on preventing cryogenic propellant boiloff in Starship during long duration cruise or while operating orbital fuel depots. The usual caveats apply! One of the major concerns with using Starship for the Human Landing System is that propellant (cryogenically liquid methane and oxygen) need to a) be transferred in orbit and b) maintained for the duration of the mission, which could be weeks, months, or years. In particular, no astronaut wants to board their Starship after a successful 6 week sortie on the Moon only to find the fuel’s boiled off and they’re stuck.  The trick lies in using energy …

3 months ago 31 votes
California’s path to redemption

California is by far the richest and most powerful polity led by Progressive ideals, and it has taken a beating of late. In this post, I discuss a practical roadmap by which California must reclaim its mantle as the shining city on the hill, an embodiment of the positive attributes of Progressive ideals and material optimism, and once again become a target of aspirational upward mobility. This will not be an easy road. Decades of complacency have squandered enviable resources and potential. But I believe a strength of America is syncretism, with the marketplace of ideas providing robust competition for …

3 months ago 31 votes
What can we send to Mars on the first Starships?

As of today, it is 601 days until October 17, 2026, when the mass-optimal launch window to Mars opens next.  While I don’t have any privileged information, it’s fun to speculate about what SpaceX could choose to send on its first Starship flights to Mars. (Spoiler alert: Rods from the gods…) Over the next 600 days, SpaceX has a number of key technologies to demonstrate; orbit, reuse, refill, and chill. It’s hard to make predictions, particularly about the future. I’m optimistic that SpaceX will have multiple fully fueled Starships ready to go in October next year, to be followed by …

3 months ago 49 votes

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How to redraw a city

The planning trick that created Japan's famous urbanism

8 hours ago 2 votes
Discarded U.K. Clothing Dumped in Protected Wetlands in Ghana

Heaps of discarded clothing from the U.K. have been dumped in protected wetlands in Ghana, an investigation found. Read more on E360 →

3 hours ago 2 votes
Wet Labs Shouldn’t Be Boring (for young scientists) | Out-Of-Pocket

This is the first touchpoint for science, we should make it more enticing

10 hours ago 2 votes
How AI Models Are Helping to Understand — and Control — the Brain

Martin Schrimpf is crafting bespoke AI models that can induce control over high-level brain activity. The post How AI Models Are Helping to Understand — and Control — the Brain first appeared on Quanta Magazine

an hour ago 1 votes
How Sewage Recycling Works

[Note that this article is a transcript of the video embedded above.] Wichita Falls, Texas, went through the worst drought in its history in 2011 and 2012. For two years in a row, the area saw its average annual rainfall roughly cut in half, decimating the levels in the three reservoirs used for the city’s water supply. Looking ahead, the city realized that if the hot, dry weather continued, they would be completely out of water by 2015. Three years sounds like a long runway, but when it comes to major public infrastructure projects, it might as well be overnight. Between permitting, funding, design, and construction, three years barely gets you to the starting line. So the city started looking for other options. And they realized there was one source of water nearby that was just being wasted - millions of gallons per day just being flushed down the Wichita River. I’m sure you can guess where I’m going with this. It was the effluent from their sewage treatment plant. The city asked the state regulators if they could try something that had never been done before at such a scale: take the discharge pipe from the wastewater treatment plant and run it directly into the purification plant that produces most of the city’s drinking water. And the state said no. So they did some more research and testing and asked again. By then, the situation had become an emergency. This time, the state said yes. And what happened next would completely change the way cities think about water. I’m Grady and this is Practical Engineering. You know what they say, wastewater happens. It wasn’t that long ago that raw sewage was simply routed into rivers, streams, or the ocean to be carried away. Thankfully, environmental regulations put a stop to that, or at least significantly curbed the amount of wastewater being set loose without treatment. Wastewater plants across the world do a pretty good job of removing pollutants these days. In fact, I have a series of videos that go through some of the major processes if you want to dive deeper after this. In most places, the permits that allow these plants to discharge set strict limits on contaminants like organics, suspended solids, nutrients, and bacteria. And in most cases, they’re individualized. The permit limits are based on where the effluent will go, how that water body is used, and how well it can tolerate added nutrients or pollutants. And here’s where you start to see the issue with reusing that water: “clean enough” is a sliding scale. Depending on how water is going to be used or what or who it’s going to interact with, our standards for cleanliness vary. If you have a dog, you probably know this. They should drink clean water, but a few sips of a mud puddle in a dirty street, and they’re usually just fine. For you, that might be a trip to the hospital. Natural systems can tolerate a pretty wide range of water quality, but when it comes to drinking water for humans, it should be VERY clean. So the easiest way to recycle treated wastewater is to use it in ways that don’t involve people. That idea’s been around for a while. A lot of wastewater treatment plants apply effluent to land as a disposal method, avoiding the need for discharge to a natural water body. Water soaks into the ground, kind of like a giant septic system. But that comes with some challenges. It only works if you’ve got a lot of land with no public access, and a way to keep the spray from drifting into neighboring properties. Easy at a small scale, but for larger plants, it just isn’t practical engineering. Plus, the only benefits a utility gets from the effluent are some groundwater recharge and maybe a few hay harvests per season. So, why not send the effluent to someone else who can actually put it to beneficial use? If only it were that simple. As soon as a utility starts supplying water to someone else, things get complicated because you lose a lot of control over how the effluent is used. Once it's out of your hands, so to speak, it’s a lot harder to make sure it doesn’t end up somewhere it shouldn’t, like someone’s mouth. So, naturally, the permitting requirements become stricter. Treatment processes get more complicated and expensive. You need regular monitoring, sampling, and laboratory testing. In many places in the world, reclaimed water runs in purple pipes so that someone doesn’t inadvertently connect to the lines thinking they’re potable water. In many cases, you need an agreement in place with the end user, making sure they’re putting up signs, fences, and other means of keeping people from drinking the water. And then you need to plan for emergencies - what to do if a pipe breaks, if the effluent quality falls below the standards, or if a cross-connection is made accidentally. It’s a lot of work - time, effort, and cost - to do it safely and follow the rules. And those costs have to be weighed against the savings that reusing water creates. In places that get a lot of rain or snow, it’s usually not worth it. But in many US states, particularly those in the southwest, this is a major strategy to reduce the demand on fresh water supplies. Think about all the things we use water for where its cleanliness isn’t that important. Irrigation is a big one - crops, pastures, parks, highway landscaping, cemeteries - but that’s not all. Power plants use huge amounts of water for cooling. Street sweeping, dust control. In nearly the entire developed world, we use drinking-quality water to flush toilets! You can see where there might be cases where it makes good sense to reclaim wastewater, and despite all the extra challenges, its use is fairly widespread. One of the first plants was built in 1926 at Grand Canyon Village which supplied reclaimed water to a power plant and for use in steam locomotives. Today, these systems can be massive, with miles and miles of purple pipes run entirely separate from the freshwater piping. I’ve talked about this a bit on the channel before. I used to live near a pair of water towers in San Antonio that were at two different heights above ground. That just didn’t make any sense until I realized they weren’t connected; one of them was for the reclaimed water system that didn’t need as much pressure in the lines. Places like Phoenix, Austin, San Antonio, Orange County, Irvine, and Tampa all have major water reclamation programs. And it’s not just a US thing. Abu Dhabi, Beijing, and Tel Aviv all have infrastructure to make beneficial use of treated municipal wastewater, just to name a few. Because of the extra treatment and requirements, many places put reclaimed water in categories based on how it gets used. The higher the risk of human contact, the tighter the pollutant limits get. For example, if a utility is just selling effluent to farmers, ranchers, or for use in construction, exposure to the public is minimal. Disinfecting the effluent with UV or chlorine may be enough to meet requirements. And often that’s something that can be added pretty simply to an existing plant. But many reclaimed water users are things like golf courses, schoolyards, sports fields, and industrial cooling towers, where people are more likely to be exposed. In those cases, you often need a sewage plant specifically designed for the purpose or at least major upgrades to include what the pros call tertiary treatment processes - ways to target pollutants we usually don’t worry about and improve the removal rates of the ones we do. These can include filters to remove suspended solids, chemicals that bind to nutrients, and stronger disinfection to more effectively kill pathogens. This creates a conundrum, though. In many cases, we treat wastewater effluent to higher standards than we normally would in order to reclaim it, but only for nonpotable uses, with strict regulations about human contact. But if it’s not being reclaimed, the quality standards are lower, and we send it downstream. If you know how rivers work, you probably see the inconsistency here. Because in many places, down the river, is the next city with its water purification plant whose intakes, in effect, reclaim that treated sewage from the people upstream. This isn’t theoretical - it’s just the reality of how humans interact with the water cycle. We’ve struggled with the problems it causes for ages. In 1906, Missouri sued Illinois in the Supreme Court when Chicago reversed their river, redirecting its water (and all the city’s sewage) toward the Mississippi River. If you live in Houston, I hate to break it to you, but a big portion of your drinking water comes from the flushes and showers in Dallas. There have been times when wastewater effluent makes up half of the flow in the Trinity River. But the question is: if they can do it, why can’t we? If our wastewater effluent is already being reused by the city downstream to purify into drinking water, why can’t we just keep the effluent for ourselves and do the same thing? And the answer again is complicated. It starts with what’s called an environmental buffer. Natural systems offer time to detect failures, dilute contaminants, and even clean the water a bit—sunlight disinfects, bacteria consume organic matter. That’s the big difference in one city, in effect, reclaiming water from another upstream. There’s nature in between. So a lot of water reclamation systems, called indirect potable reuse, do the same thing: you discharge the effluent into a river, lake, or aquifer, then pull it out again later for purification into drinking water. By then, it’s been diluted and treated somewhat by the natural systems. Direct potable reuse projects skip the buffer and pipe straight from one treatment plant to the next. There’s no margin for error provided by the environmental buffer. So, you have to engineer those same protections into the system: real-time monitoring, alarms, automatic shutdowns, and redundant treatment processes. Then there’s the issue of contaminants of emerging concern: pharmaceuticals, PFAS [P-FAS], personal care products - things that pass through people or households and end up in wastewater in tiny amounts. Individually, they’re in parts per billion or trillion. But when you close the loop and reuse water over and over, those trace compounds can accumulate. Many of these aren’t regulated because they’ve never reached concentrations high enough to cause concern, or there just isn’t enough knowledge about their effects yet. That’s slowly changing, and it presents a big challenge for reuse projects. They can be dealt with at the source by regulating consumer products, encouraging proper disposal of pharmaceuticals (instead of flushing them), and imposing pretreatment requirements for industries. It can also happen at the treatment plant with advanced technologies like reverse osmosis, activated carbon, advanced oxidation, and bio-reactors that break down micro-contaminants. Either way, it adds cost and complexity to a reuse program. But really, the biggest problem with wastewater reuse isn’t technical - it’s psychological. The so-called “yuck factor” is real. People don’t want to drink sewage. Indirect reuse projects have a big benefit here. With some nature in between, it’s not just treated wastewater; it’s a natural source of water with treated wastewater in it. It’s kind of a story we tell ourselves, but we lose the benefit of that with direct reuse: Knowing your water came from a toilet—even if it’s been purified beyond drinking water standards—makes people uneasy. You might not think about it, but turning the tap on, putting that water in a glass, and taking a drink is an enormous act of trust. Most of us don’t understand water treatment and how it happens at a city scale. So that trust that it’s safe to drink largely comes from seeing other people do it and past experience of doing it over and over and not getting sick. The issue is that, when you add one bit of knowledge to that relative void of understanding - this water came directly from sewage - it throws that trust off balance. It forces you not to rely not on past experience but on the people and processes in place, most of which you don’t understand deeply, and generally none of which you can actually see. It’s not as simple as just revulsion. It shakes up your entire belief system. And there’s no engineering fix for that. Especially for direct potable reuse, public trust is critical. So on top of the infrastructure, these programs also involve major public awareness campaigns. Utilities have to put themselves out there, gather feedback, respond to questions, be empathetic to a community’s values, and try to help people understand how we ensure water quality, no matter what the source is. But also, like I said, a lot of that trust comes from past experience. Not everyone can be an environmental engineer or licensed treatment plant operator. And let’s be honest - utilities can’t reach everyone. How many public meetings about water treatment have you ever attended? So, in many places, that trust is just going to have to be built by doing it right, doing it well, and doing it for a long time. But, someone has to be first. In the U.S., at least on the city scale, that drinking water guinea pig was Wichita Falls. They launched a massive outreach campaign, invited experts for tours, and worked to build public support. But at the end of the day, they didn’t really have a choice. The drought really was that severe. They spent nearly four years under intense water restrictions. Usage dropped to a third of normal demand, but it still wasn’t enough. So, in collaboration with state regulators, they designed an emergency direct potable reuse system. They literally helped write the rules as they went, since no one had ever done it before. After two months of testing and verification, they turned on the system in July 2014. It made national headlines. The project ran for exactly one year. Then, in 2015, a massive flood ended the drought and filled the reservoirs in just three weeks. The emergency system was always meant to be temporary. Water essentially went through three treatment plants: the wastewater plant, a reverse osmosis plant, and then the regular water purification plant. That’s a lot of treatment, which is a lot of expense, but they needed to have the failsafe and redundancy to get the state on board with the project. The pipe connecting the two plants was above ground and later repurposed for the city’s indirect potable reuse system, which is still in use today. In the end, they reclaimed nearly two billion gallons of wastewater as drinking water. And they did it with 100% compliance with the standards. But more importantly, they showed that it could be done, essentially unlocking a new branch on the skill tree of engineering that other cities can emulate and build on.

yesterday 4 votes