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12 Apr, 2017 18:48

‘Beercycling’: Help the environment by urinating at Denmark’s Roskilde Festival (VIDEO)

‘Beercycling’: Help the environment by urinating at Denmark’s Roskilde Festival (VIDEO)

Nordic drinkers could soon be swilling ice cold lagers made using the urine of music lovers after the Danish Agriculture & Food Council announced the relaunch of an unusual recycling project involving festival urinals.

This year, those answering a call of nature at the Roskilde music festival, Denmark, may also be providing a key ingredient for the production of liquid gold pilsner. 

READ MORE: New NASA grant explores turning human poop into astronaut meals

While the pilsner does not actually contain human waste, urine collected from special urinals and storage tanks will be used to fertilize malting barley.

The pilsner lager is being called ‘pilsner’ – although the Danish Agriculture & Food Council has posed other suggestions like ‘Yellow ale’ and ‘Pale piss’ on its official Twitter page.

The project is a return of a 2015 ‘beercycling’ effort which saw 54,000 liters of Roskilde festival urine converted into “50 metric tons of fertilizer” for Danish barley fields.

“Just as we have seen shops sell goods that would otherwise have been thrown out, Beercycling allows us to recycle a product that is normally flushed down the drain,”said Karen Haekkerup, CEO of the Danish Agriculture & Food Council.

“When it comes to the circular economy, Danish farmers are some of the best in the world. If you can brew a beer with urine as fertilizer, you can recycle almost anything,” she said.

The unconventional beverage will be produced by micro-brewery Norrebro Bryghus who plan to brew 60,000 bottles of the 'Yellow ale.’

READ MORE: 99 bottles of beer on the road: Booze rains down on highway patrol trooper (VIDEO)

“We want to be a part of the Beercycling project partly due to the story it has already told,” said  Norrebro Bryghus director, Henrik Vang. “But also because it is interesting to partake in a project, which addresses the challenges of sustainability and circular economy. Basically, it is a cool project,” he said

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