Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Waterloo, Ont., To Turn Dog Poop Into Energy, Fertilizer Through Pilot Program

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Apr, 2017 10:26 AM
    WATERLOO, Ont. — The Ontario city best known for headquartering BlackBerry may soon be known for an entirely different commodity — dog poop.
     
    Waterloo will soon be the home of a pilot program that will turn dog waste into energy, using a process called anaerobic digestion that happens when organic waste breaks down in an environment without oxygen.
     
    The city's mayor, Dave Jaworsky, said this is one the first times this sort of program — which he jokingly calls "poop power" — will be implemented in a Canadian city.
     
    Jaworsky said it's eco-friendly and should help curb the amount of litter produced by the city of about 100,000 people.
     
    "It's actually a big issue, dog waste. If you look at our municipal litter bins ... it's 40 to 80 per cent dog waste," he said, adding that the city collects about 115,000 kilograms of trash every year.
     
    He said the process for harvesting dog waste and turning it into power is fairly simple — and it's not entirely new.
     
    "In rural townships, this isn't an uncommon technique to deal with manure and that kind of thing," he says. "So, it's really just bringing the rural technology to the urban environment."
     
    It works like this: a dog-owner walking their pet will scoop up its waste, just like they would normally. But instead of throwing the bag into a trash can, they pop it into one of these special receptacles.
     
    Jaworsky said they look something like a "rural post box" — but they're bright green, and the opening is dog-shaped.
     
    The bags of dog poop are stored in an underground container for 10 to 14 days, Jaworsky said, and then vacuumed out and sent to a processing plant outside of the city, where it will be combined with other organic waste.
     
    Through anaerobic digestion, it will create a biogas, which can then be burned for heat and energy. Any of the leftover waste is then used for fertilizer.
     
    Jaworsky said the idea came from a local man, who works in general construction and owns a dog.
     
    "He just thought, you know, 'There must be a better way to do things,' and came up with this idea," he said.
     
    He said the man took the idea to the American groundwaste company Sutera, which will be running the pilot.
     
    Jaworsky said the program may expand into other cities across North America.
     
    The project will begin rolling out in the coming weeks in three parks throughout the city — including a leash-free dog park.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Newfoundland Police Officer Acquitted In Contentious Sexual Assault Case

    Newfoundland Police Officer Acquitted In Contentious Sexual Assault Case
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A jury has acquitted a Newfoundland police officer of sexually assaulting an intoxicated woman he drove home from a bar while on duty.

    Newfoundland Police Officer Acquitted In Contentious Sexual Assault Case

    Man Dead After Campervan Goes Up In Flames In Surrey, B.C.

    Man Dead After Campervan Goes Up In Flames In Surrey, B.C.
    Mounties say the victim, a 55-year-old Surrey resident, was sleeping when the blaze began.

    Man Dead After Campervan Goes Up In Flames In Surrey, B.C.

    Teacher At School In Southern Alberta Charged With Child Sex Exploitation

    Teacher At School In Southern Alberta Charged With Child Sex Exploitation
    LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — A teacher from a school in southern Alberta is facing child exploitation charges.

    Teacher At School In Southern Alberta Charged With Child Sex Exploitation

    Man Claims GPS Led Him Into Toronto Transit Tunnel Where Car Got Stuck: TTC

    Man Claims GPS Led Him Into Toronto Transit Tunnel Where Car Got Stuck: TTC
    A man who allegedly drove his SUV into a streetcar tunnel on Thursday, bringing traffic in downtown Toronto to a halt for several hours, reportedly told transit officials he was following his GPS instructions when his vehicle got stuck.

    Man Claims GPS Led Him Into Toronto Transit Tunnel Where Car Got Stuck: TTC

    Getting A Coffee Led To Arrest Of Woman Accused Of Making Hoax 911 Call: Police

      A 36-year-old woman is charged with public mischief.

    Getting A Coffee Led To Arrest Of Woman Accused Of Making Hoax 911 Call: Police

    Wearing Boots But In The Buff, Prince George Toddler Ok After Wandering Outside

    Wearing Boots But In The Buff, Prince George Toddler Ok After Wandering Outside
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — The RCMP are thanking a Canada Post employee in British Columbia for helping solve a case involving a nude toddler who had gone missing.

    Wearing Boots But In The Buff, Prince George Toddler Ok After Wandering Outside