FOOD NEWBrew beer in Singapore is made from recycled sewage water

Green Co.

Administrator
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A new blond ale being sold in Singapore will allow beer-drinkers to literally “get pissed.”

The alcoholic beverage, called NEWBrew, uses recycled sewage water to create the drink. It first went on sale in stores in the Asian city-state in April.

The beverage is made from NEWater — specially treated sewage water first introduced in 2003.

The island nation lacks natural water sources and is thus heavily dependent on rainfall. Any prolonged dry spell puts Singapore at risk of severe water shortages.

It relies on desalination plants that turn seawater into drinkable water by removing salts and minerals through a process known as reverse osmosis.

Singapore also uses the NEWater process in which sewage water is subjected to a microfiltration that weeds out microscopic particles and bacteria.

The treated water is then put through a phase of reverse osmosis and ultraviolet disinfection that is aimed at killing the remaining bacteria and viruses, ensuring purity.

Beer-drinkers in the Asian city-state who have sampled the ale said they like the taste.

Countries and cities such as Israel, Los Angeles and London that lack freshwater sources and have been plagued by water scarcity have either incorporated the technology or are considering doing so.

PUB, which is the government agency responsible for managing the country’s water supply, partnered with Brewerkz, a local craft brewery, and created NEWBrew.

The result is a beer that tastes like, well, beer, with no hint of its unsavory origins.

“NEWater perfectly suits brewing because it tastes neutral,” Mitch Gribov, Brewerkz’s head brewer, told Bloomberg.
“The mineral profile of water plays a key role in chemical reactions during brewing.”

Some locals who have sampled the beer said they couldn’t tell the difference.
“If you don’t tell people it’s made from wastewater, they probably won’t know,” said Grace Chen, 52.

Others, however, prefer to steer clear of the drink knowing where it came from.

“There are many kinds of beers around,” 22-year-old Low Yu Chen said. “If I wanted a beer, I’d pick something made of normal water.”
The Singapore-based brewer said that the beer is flying off the supermarket shelves so fast that it could be sold out by the end of July.
It will assess consumer reaction before deciding whether to manufacture more ale.

NEWBrew isn’t the first beer that uses recycled sewage. Swedish brewer Nya Carnegie Brewery collaborated with beer giant Carlsberg and an environmental research institute to create a pilsner made with purified toilet water.

A Canadian brewer, Village Brewery, teamed up with US water technology firm Xylem and researchers from the University of Calgary to create their own ale.

 

ktrapper

Veteran Member
Anyone who lives down stream is drinking the flushed toilets from upstream. That is why they are finding so many drugs in the water. So remember to always flush because your downstream neighbor needs the water and maybe a hit of Prozac.
One of the reasons we live at a high elevation. No one, nothing but wilderness above us and our spring comes out of the ground on our place. We still filter our drinking water though.
 

ibetiny

Veteran Member
What do you think a wastewater treatment plant is? Most water from your kitchen sink was once sewage.
 

greysage

On The Level
They will eat freeze-dried cricket protein that is rehydrated with their own recycled sewage-water, and like it.
 

Texican

Live Free & Die Free.... God Freedom Country....
Decades ago there was an US city that was running out of water. They started treating the treated sewage effluent for use in the potable water and used it in the water system.

They informed the citizens that this would start on the first of the next month. When the date rolled around, the citizens started calling into the city and complaining that the water had a funny taste and smell.

The city had a simple statement that was used with all such calls:

You have been drinking the treated sewage effluent for a month with no calls about taste or smell.


You can live up to three days without water.

When you get thirsty enough, you will drink out of mud puddles and even urine which can be used up to three times before it becomes to salty.

Texican....
 

cyberiot

Rimtas žmogus
My understanding is that there is a finite amount of water on Earth. They're not making any more. That finite amount is continually recycled. No doubt we have all consumed a few molecules of what was once dinosaur pee or Cleopatra's lip sweat.

Even so, sewage beer is not something I'd go out of my way to drink. TMI . . .

do-not-want-2.jpg
 

Double_A

TB Fanatic
One of the reasons we live at a high elevation. No one, nothing but wilderness above us and our spring comes out of the ground on our place. We still filter our drinking water though.

Humm, so you don't have any Bears that shit in the Woods? You picked a good site.
 

Satanta

Stone Cold Crazy
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Place I worked in Florida-Travel Plaza, first one you hit going South on the Turnpike, had it's own waterwater treatment plant as do all of them.

The wateris separated, chemically treated, filtered and whatever else they did [[been a lot of years since I was there]] then recycled back into the Plaza water system fro drinking, toilets and so-forth.

It's done in a lot of places, probably more than we know because it is kind-of a secret since people would react in Meatworld the same as they react here over it.

It is thought every drop of water on the Planet has been used at least once so your are Technically drinking Dinosaur piss.
 
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