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La orina de los corredores del maratón de Londres se convertirá en fertilizante para el trigo

Cada año, el Maratón de Londres TCS reúne a decenas de miles de participantes, pero en su edición más reciente, un proyecto de innovación sostenible captó una atención especial: la recolección de orina femenina para convertirla en fertilizante agrícola. Esta iniciativa, impulsada por la startup PEEQUAL en colaboración con NPK Recovery, propone una forma inédita de reutilizar un recurso que tradicionalmente se desperdicia, reduciendo así la huella de carbono del evento deportivo más popular del Reino Unido.

La idea surgió originalmente de un problema frecuente en eventos multitudinarios: las filas eternas para acceder a los baños femeninos. En respuesta, PEEQUAL diseñó urinarios portátiles exclusivos para mujeres, una solución que, según sus creadores, permite reducir en un 270 % el tiempo promedio que tarda una mujer en usar el baño. Estos urinarios no solo mejoran la experiencia de las corredoras, sino que también aprovechan un momento clave: el nerviosismo y la hidratación previos a la carrera hacen que cientos de mujeres necesiten utilizar el baño poco antes del disparo de largada. En su tercer año consecutivo en el Maratón de Londres, los dispositivos de PEEQUAL no solo optimizan los tiempos, sino que también se transformaron en una fuente inesperada de materia prima para fertilizantes.
La empresa NPK Recovery estimó que recolectando 1.000 litros de orina de los urinarios instalados en la salida amarilla del maratón, se podría fertilizar suficiente trigo como para producir aproximadamente 195 barras de pan. Este año, estos litros servirán para pruebas de campo, donde se evaluará la eficacia del fertilizante generado a partir de la orina. Sin embargo, si se lograra escalar el sistema y capturar toda la orina generada durante el evento —cerca de 53.700 participantes el año pasado—, el potencial de producción crecería exponencialmente: hasta 3.142 hogazas de pan podrían ser horneadas gracias al trigo cultivado con este abono natural.
“La orina no tiene por qué ser un producto de desecho”, explicó Hannah Vandenbergh, fundadora de NPK Recovery. Para la empresa, la materia que muchos consideran residual puede convertirse en un recurso valioso, alimentando de forma sostenible los sistemas agrícolas y cerrando el ciclo de los nutrientes.
El proceso de NPK Recovery implica el tratamiento y desinfección de la orina mediante el uso de bacterias. Estas bacterias actúan sobre los componentes químicos del líquido, especialmente urea, nitrógeno y amoníaco, sustancias clave en los fertilizantes tradicionales. De esta forma, el sistema no solo purifica el desecho, sino que también recupera sus nutrientes esenciales para transformarlos en un fertilizante líquido efectivo y seguro para cultivos como el trigo, que demanda altos niveles de nitrógeno para su desarrollo.
El objetivo a largo plazo es aún más ambicioso: tanto PEEQUAL como NPK Recovery aspiran a expandir este modelo a otros eventos masivos alrededor del mundo, fomentando una nueva manera de gestionar los residuos humanos y contribuir al desarrollo agrícola sostenible.

La incorporación del reciclaje de orina en el Maratón de Londres se inscribe dentro de una estrategia ambiental más amplia impulsada por London Marathon Events. Según Kate Chapman, directora de sostenibilidad de la organización, uno de los pilares de su política medioambiental es encontrar “usos posteriores” para todos los residuos generados en el evento. Entre sus iniciativas se incluyen el compostaje, la reutilización y el suprarreciclaje de los materiales.
“Estamos encantados de que la orina de los urinarios PEEQUAL pueda utilizarse para algo tan positivo en lugar de desperdiciarse”, expresó Chapman. Este proyecto representa una forma concreta de avanzar hacia una reducción significativa del impacto ambiental del maratón.
El éxito de los urinarios femeninos también se refleja en las opiniones de las participantes. Susan Farrell, quien corrió en apoyo de la NSPCC, compartió su entusiasmo al respecto: “Utilicé los novedosos urinarios de PEEQUAL en Glastonbury: su diseño significa que no sacrifican la privacidad y, honestamente, sentí que estábamos haciendo trampa al saltearnos las colas”.
Farrell también subrayó una sensación de justicia largamente esperada: “Solía ver a los chicos pasar rápidamente y pensar: ‘¿Por qué no podemos tener eso?’ Ahora lo hacemos”. Esta percepción refuerza la importancia de iniciativas que no solo buscan reducir el impacto ambiental, sino también mejorar la experiencia y la equidad de género en los eventos deportivos.
La cofundadora de PEEQUAL, Amber Probyn, reafirmó esta visión: “Nos encanta venir al Maratón de Londres TCS porque creemos firmemente que las mujeres no deberían tener que elegir entre comenzar su carrera a tiempo o esperar para ir al baño”.
Con este tipo de iniciativas, el Maratón de Londres no solo se posiciona como una competencia de alto nivel deportivo, sino también como un laboratorio vivo de innovación en sostenibilidad y equidad. De la nerviosa espera de las corredoras en los baños portátiles surgió una idea que, literalmente, puede hacer crecer los campos de trigo del mañana.
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Norway raises security concerns over Manhattan-sized Arctic land sale as tensions rise

A large plot of private land in Norway’s Arctic Svalbard archipelago may soon be sold for about €300 million ($330 million), but the deal has raised concerns in Oslo over national security.
The property, known as Søre Fagerfjord, covers roughly 60 square kilometers (23 square miles) and is the last privately owned land in Svalbard.
A group of international and Norwegian investors has offered to buy the land, but officials in Norway worry it could give foreign powers a strategic foothold in a sensitive Arctic region.
The land is about 60 kilometers (37 miles) from the main town of Longyearbyen and has been in Norwegian hands for over a century. It was listed for sale last year, and the government quickly made it clear that any sale must be cleared in advance due to security laws.
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Snow-covered mountains near the Kings Bay research station in Ny-Ålesund on Spitsbergen island, Norway, April 10, 2015. (Jens Büttner/picture alliance via Getty Images)
One of the sellers even called it a «strategic foothold in the High Arctic,» which has only fueled concerns.
Svalbard is becoming more important as melting sea ice opens up new shipping routes and increases global interest in the region.
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A white rainbow over the Arctic Sea at Svalbard, Norway. (Arterra/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
The buyers describe themselves as environmentalists from NATO countries who want to protect the land.
«The consortium includes both Norwegian and international investors who have a long-term perspective of protecting this territory from environmental changes,» said Birgit Liodden, a shareholder and climate activist.
She added that about half the money from the sale would go toward environmental projects in Svalbard. So far, the group has not discussed the sale with the Norwegian government.

In the area surrounding Nordenskjøld Land National Park in Svalbard, a lone polar bear is exposed on the rocks where a decade ago a glacier stood. (Mark Fitzsimmons, Sony World Photography Awards 2023)
Still, Norwegian officials are cautious. In 2024, they blocked a similar attempt by Chinese investors. Trade Minister Cecilie Myrseth warned at the time that such actions could harm regional stability and threaten national interests.
Svalbard is governed by a 1920 treaty that gives over 40 countries, including Russia, China and the U.S., equal rights to live and do business there.
Russia, which operates a settlement on the islands, has accused Norway of breaking the treaty by increasing its military presence, something Norway denies.
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The sellers’ lawyer, Per Kyllingstad, said the buyers only want to protect nature and that the sale should not be blocked.
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Trump roasted Dem critics, media with new nicknames in first 100 days online: ‘Watermelon-Head’

President Donald Trump has been unafraid to publicly blast Democrats and the liberal media during his first 100 days in office, continuing a similar trend from his first term.
In one high-profile skirmish, Trump publicly berated Maine’s Democrat. Gov. Janet Mills for defying his executive order barring biological males who identify as transgender from competing in women’s sports.
«Your population doesn’t want men playing in women’s sports, so you better comply because otherwise you’re not getting any federal funding,» Trump told Mills during a meeting of the nation’s governors at the White House in February. Mills argued she would «see [him] ion court» over the matter, to which the president responded: «I look forward to that. That should be a real easy one.»
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«Enjoy your life after governor,» he added, «because I don’t think you’ll be in elected politics.»
A second notable clash with Democrats came during Trump’s joint address to Congress in March. Several Democrats held up anti-Trump signs, shouted and moaned in the middle of Trump’s speech, and some ultimately walked out. Progressive Democratic Rep. Al Green of Texas had to be escorted out of the House chamber because he would not stop disrupting the president’s speech and was subsequently censured by members of his own party over the stunt.
«I realize there is absolutely nothing I can say to make them happy or make them stand and smile or applaud,» Trump said during his address, looking toward the Democrats’ side of the House chamber. «I could find a cure to the most devastating diseases. A disease that would wipe out entire nations, or announce the answers to the greatest economy in history… and these people sitting right here will not clap, will not stand, and certainly will not cheer for these astronomical achievements.»
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«It’s very sad,» Trump added. «And it just shouldn’t be this way.»
The press has not been spared from public lashings by Trump during his second term, either.
In one notable back-and-forth, Trump was asked by a reporter in the Oval Office whether he thought he had the legal authority to mass deport illegal aliens. In response, the president flipped the script on the reporter, asking in return: «Did Biden have the authority to allow millions of people to come into our country?»
In another testy back-and-forth with reporters, this time aboard Air Force One, Trump did not mince words with a reporter from Bloomberg who questioned Trump about his tariffs.
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«I think your questions are so stupid,» Trump told the reporter aboard Air Force One after he was asked if there was any «pain in the market at some point you’re unwilling to tolerate?»
«I don’t want anything to go down, but sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something,» Trump shot back. «And we have such a horrible, we have been treated so badly, by other countries because we had stupid leadership that allowed this to happen.»
President Donald Trump speaks to the press aboard Air Force One before arriving at Palm Beach International Airport in Florida, on March 28, 2025. (Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images)
Trump’s public lashings of Democrats and the media have also included new nicknames for the president’s political opponents.
One of those targets, Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., garnered himself a new nickname this term: «Watermelon-Head.» The nickname follows Trump’s first-term nickname he gave to Schiff: «Pencil neck.»
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«Adam ‘Schifty’ Schiff – can you believe this guy?» Trump said at a dinner hosted by the National Republican Congressional Committee earlier this month. «He’s got the smallest neck I’ve ever seen – and the biggest head: We call him Watermelon-Head.» Trump went on to ponder how Schiff’s «big fat face» could «stand on a neck» the size of the president’s finger.
«It’s the weirdest thing – it’s a mystery; no one can understand it.»

Trump gives his joint address to Congress and is interrupted by Rep. Al Green protesting his cuts to multiple government programs. March 4. (AP)
Another Trump nickname to come from his first 100 days did not target a specific person, but Democrats as a whole who have been against his tariff policies.
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«The United States has a chance to do something that should have been done DECADES AGO. Don’t be Weak! Don’t be Stupid! Don’t be a PANICAN (A new party based on Weak and Stupid people!),» Trump wrote in a post on his social media platform Truth Social earlier this month. «Be Strong, Courageous, and Patient, and GREATNESS will be the result!»
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