‘Drinking Recycled Sewage Is The Future, Don’t Be Squeamish’ Says WEF-Linked Expert

Sir James Bevan, the head of the UK’s Environment Agency and is linked to the World Economic Forum (WEF), wrote an article about droughts and said that “drinking recycled sewage is the future,” and that common people need to be “less squeamish” about drinking toilet-to-tap water. Los Angeles County is threatening a similar move to recycle wastewater for human consumption within the next 5 years. The City of Los Angeles has set out to recycle 100% of its wastewater by 2035, per a pledge made by Mayor Eric Garcetti several years ago. Meanwhile, global elites are conspiring to turn water from a free good into a commodity.

The head of the UK’s Environment Agency, who is linked to the World Economic Forum, says that common people need to be “less squeamish” about drinking “toilet-to-tap” water from sewage plants, as countries and states around the world move towards recycling sewage for human consumption, falling into lockstep with WEF ideology.

According to an op-ed in The Times, Sir James Bevan, whose views have previously been disseminated by the WEF, writes that “drinking recycled sewage is the future.”

The idea of recycling wastewater for human consumption — once the realm of dystopian sci-fi films — is gaining traction globally as the WEF penetrates governments.

“The recent rainfall hasn’t changed the underlying position in this country: many parts are likely to stay in drought for months, and if we have a dry winter then next year will be even more challenging,” Bevan writes. We will need to be less squeamish about where our drinking water comes from. Part of the solution will be to reprocess the water that results from sewage treatment and turn it back into drinking water — perfectly safe and healthy, but not something many people fancy.”

Sir Bevan’s op-ed comes as US water supplies are under strain due to an ongoing, and worsening drought which has resulted in ten areas being given drought status by the Environment Agency.

Because of this, Sir Bevan says that common people need to “change the way they think about water,” and “treat it as a precious resource, not a free good.”

“If we are going to get there, we are all going to have to think differently. Some of these measures will be unpopular, so future governments will need to show political will,” he said.

Earlier this year, Singapore’s water agency launched a beer made with recycled sewage in order to raise awareness over the country’s water security issues (and probably to mask the taste of poo).

Zero Hedge report that Los Angeles County is threatening a similar move to recycle wastewater for human consumption.

“There’s been a public health legacy where sanitary engineering practices and regulators considered sewage a waste, it was something to be avoided, something to be feared,” said Brad Coffey of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California. “Now that we have the technology … the public, the regulators, the scientific community has much greater confidence in our ability to safely reuse that water supply.”

Read full article here…

Natural News:    https://www.naturalnews.com/2022-07-27-los-angeles-to-recycle-biosludge-tap-water.html