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This refers to an experimental prototype developed around 2004 by the US Army Combat Feeding Directorate. The technology used an osmotic membrane filter that could remove 99.9% of bacteria from contaminated water or urine to rehydrate dried food pouches. However, this was never standard-issue equipment and was only intended for emergency use (the membrane couldn't filter urea, risking kidney damage). No evidence this technology is currently deployed or used in modern military rations.

The U.S. military's dried food rations can be re-hydrated with urine!

The Military Rations You Could Rehydrate With Pee

6k viewsPosted 16 years agoUpdated 3 hours ago

In the early 2000s, military food scientists tackled one of warfare's oldest problems: soldiers need to eat, but water is heavy. The solution they came up with was innovative, if a bit unsettling—dried food pouches that could be rehydrated with the filthiest swamp water imaginable, or even urine.

Developed by the US Army's Combat Feeding Directorate in collaboration with Hydration Technology of Albany, Oregon, these experimental rations weren't your standard MREs (Meals Ready to Eat). They were lightweight dehydrated meals—chicken and rice, for example—sealed in pouches with built-in filtration systems.

How the Filter Technology Worked

The magic was in the membrane. Each pouch contained a semipermeable cellulose-based filter with gaps just 0.5 nanometers across—small enough to block 99.9% of bacteria and most toxic chemicals, but large enough to let water molecules pass through.

The process relied on osmosis. When a soldier poured contaminated water (or urine) into the pouch, water molecules would seep through the membrane into the dehydrated food. As the food dissolved, it created osmotic pressure that pulled more water through, leaving contaminants behind.

The Urine Problem

Here's where things get complicated. While the filter could handle bacteria and many toxins, it couldn't filter out urea—the waste compound that makes urine, well, urine. Hydration Technology issued a clear warning: using urine should only happen in absolute emergencies. Long-term consumption of urea-contaminated food would cause kidney damage.

This wasn't a "just add pee" solution for everyday use. It was a last-resort survival option when the only alternative was dehydration or starvation.

Weight Savings

The real appeal was logistics. A full day's worth of traditional rations weighs about 3.5 kilograms. With dehydrated pouches, that dropped to roughly 0.4 kilograms. For soldiers carrying heavy packs through hostile territory, that's a significant advantage—assuming they could find water to rehydrate the meals.

What Happened to This Technology?

Despite the innovative engineering, these urine-compatible rations never became standard issue. Reports about the technology surfaced around 2004, but there's no evidence it was ever widely deployed or adopted by the military. Modern MREs remain fully hydrated, ready-to-eat meals that don't require any water source.

The experimental pouches remain a fascinating footnote in military food history—a reminder that necessity drives some truly creative (if somewhat uncomfortable) innovations. Sometimes the most extreme survival scenarios demand equally extreme solutions, even if they never make it past the prototype stage.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you really rehydrate military food with urine?
Experimental military rations developed in the early 2000s had filters that could technically rehydrate food with urine, but it was only meant for absolute emergencies. The filters couldn't remove urea, which would cause kidney damage with repeated use.
Do current military MREs need to be rehydrated?
No. Modern MREs (Meals Ready to Eat) are fully cooked, pre-hydrated meals that can be eaten straight from the package. They don't require any water or rehydration.
Why would the military develop food you could rehydrate with urine?
The goal was to reduce weight—dehydrated rations weigh about 90% less than traditional ones. In survival situations where clean water is scarce, having a filtration system that could use contaminated water sources (including urine as a last resort) could be life-saving.
What happened to the urine-rehydratable military rations?
They never became standard military equipment. The technology was developed around 2004 as an experimental prototype but was never widely deployed or adopted by the US military.
How did the military ration filters work?
The pouches used semipermeable membranes with 0.5-nanometer gaps that allowed water molecules through while blocking 99.9% of bacteria and most toxins. Osmosis pulled water from contaminated sources into the dehydrated food, leaving contaminants behind.

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