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Waste flushed down the loo in London could be used for building new homes.

Thames Water says it will use sewage – which already generates renewable power – to help create heavy-duty bricks.

Every day, the waste of four million Londoners entering Europe’s largest sewage works in Beckton is drained of water, with the leftover solids roasted in a waste-to-energy incinerator.

(Image: Thames Water)

The high temperatures sanitise the waste and release heat for producing electricity on site.

The leftover ash has – until now – been binned.

However this dried ash will now be combined with carbon dioxide, water, sand and a small quantity of cement to form aggregate for individual breeze blocks – each weighing 17kg.

The process is expected to produce 18,000 tonnes of aggregate every year - enough for around 2.3 million construction blocks to be used in a range of property and business developments across the capital and beyond.

Watch: This is what happens to Coventry's waste

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Nigel Watts, Thames Water’s head of wastewater treatment, said: “We’re transforming tonnes of waste from our sewage treatment process into a useful product, which can be used in construction in a variety of ways.

"It’s amazing to think that what’s flushed down the toilet could light up your bathroom and now help build homes, helping to support the huge growth predicted for our region.

“We’re always looking for alternative, more sustainable ways to dispose of waste that avoids landfill and this is fantastic news for our customers, putting downward pressure on bills, and the environment, which we work hard to protect and enhance.”

Using ash to produce synthetic aggregate locks in around 800 tonnes of CO2 and will replace 18,000 tonnes of natural resources being dug out of the ground annually – contributing to the UK’s circular economy.

In addition, the synthetic aggregate is carbon beneficial as more CO2 is captured than is generated in the manufacturing process.

It’s estimated that an extra 2.1 million people are due to move into the Thames Water region over the next 25 years.

As part of its business plan for 2020-25, the company has pledged to spend £2.1bn increasing resilience and generate enough renewable electricity to power the equivalent of 115,000 homes.

Beckton sewage works, in the east London borough of Newham, was part of Sir Joseph Bazalgette’s original 1864 waste network for the capital.

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