Scientists find gold in Swiss sewage system

13 Oct 2017

1

Researchers have uncovered gold from the unlikeliest of places - sewage, Swiss sewage to be more accurate.

The precious metal has been recovered from Swiss sewage and waste water treatment plants, CNN Money reported.

According to scientists conducting the research, around 95 pounds of the rich material is flushed through the Swiss sewage systems each year and the price tag on the accumulated gold works out to roughly $2 million.

The study was conducted by an aquatic science institute called Eawag.

Scientists speculate that flecks of gold enter the waste water system from the country's watchmaking industry and even gold refineries.

The sweeping study, which was commissioned by the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment, analysed 64 waste water treatment plants in the country, CNN Money reported.

Certain areas of the country were found to have greater concentration of the metal, with one section near refineries boasting elevated levels of the metal.

But gold is not the only pricey metal flowing through the sewage system in Switzerland, there is silver that can be extricated as well.

According to researchers' speculation, the silver findings (and that of other rare minerals) could be traced to the nation's manufacturing of electronic devices.

The Swiss waste water system is estimated to process 6,500 pounds of silver each year translating to about $1.8 million, according to CNN Money.

In the study commissioned by the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment, researchers surveyed 64 waste water treatment plants across the country.

"Concentrations of gold in sewage sludge are sufficiently high for recovery to be potentially worthwhile," the researchers wrote.

According to the researchers, more than 6,500 pounds of silver ($1.8 million at current prices) flows into Swiss waste water each year.

In September, Swiss investigators launched a probe into why two Spanish women flushed roughly €100,000 ($120,000) down toilets in Geneva.

According to the Geneva Prosecutors' Office, cut-up €500 bills were found to have been flushed down toilets at a UBS bank branch and three nearby restaurants.

Latest articles

European truckmakers face “eat our lunch” moment as low-cost Chinese electric rigs arrive

European truckmakers face “eat our lunch” moment as low-cost Chinese electric rigs arrive

Anthropic sues to block Pentagon blacklist, warns of multibillion-dollar revenue collapse

Anthropic sues to block Pentagon blacklist, warns of multibillion-dollar revenue collapse

Ex-Meta AI chief Yann LeCun’s AMI raises $1.03 billion for alternative AI approach

Ex-Meta AI chief Yann LeCun’s AMI raises $1.03 billion for alternative AI approach

Global crude price rise unlikely to significantly impact India’s inflation, says finance minister

Global crude price rise unlikely to significantly impact India’s inflation, says finance minister

Hical Technologies wins long-term contract to supply control systems for Rafale fighter aircraft

Hical Technologies wins long-term contract to supply control systems for Rafale fighter aircraft

Nvidia-backed Nscale valued at $14.6 billion in fresh $2 billion funding round

Nvidia-backed Nscale valued at $14.6 billion in fresh $2 billion funding round

Nxtra plans $1 billion fundraise; Alpha Wave set to join Airtel and Carlyle

Nxtra plans $1 billion fundraise; Alpha Wave set to join Airtel and Carlyle

Energy crisis fears grow as U.S. urges India to buy Russian oil; G7 weighs reserve release

Energy crisis fears grow as U.S. urges India to buy Russian oil; G7 weighs reserve release

Tesla billionaire Leo KoGuan doubles Nvidia stake amid market volatility

Tesla billionaire Leo KoGuan doubles Nvidia stake amid market volatility