These money-generating toilets is a sanitation solution designed specifically for India's needs. SHRI -- Sanitation and Health Rights in India -- is an organization on a mission to end open defecation in India. Health and sanitation is a key pillar in breaking the cycle of poverty in developing communities, which is also linked to access to clean water. SHRI states 600 million Indians defecate openly and more than 100 million do not have access to safe drinking water.
Their sanitation solution are facilities (8 toilets each for women and men plus plumbing, hand washing stations and a biogas register) that are free to use and generate water filtration with methane gas. Therefore, using human waste they can make clean water available to the public. SHRI sells the filtered water to offset the operation and maintenance costs.
Water-Filtering Toilets
The Self-Generated Facilities are a Sanitation Solution for Indians
Trend Themes
1. Sanitation Solutions - The development of self-generated facilities that provide clean water through water-filtering toilets presents an opportunity for disruptive innovation in the sanitation industry.
2. Water Filtration Technology - Advancements in water filtration technology can revolutionize the way access to clean water is provided, as demonstrated by the use of human waste to generate clean water in these toilets.
3. Poverty Alleviation - Addressing the connection between health, sanitation, and poverty, initiatives like SHRI's water-filtering toilets create the potential for disruptive innovation in poverty alleviation efforts.
Industry Implications
1. Sanitation - The sanitation industry can explore opportunities to incorporate water-filtering toilets into its solutions, enhancing access to clean water and improving public health.
2. Water Treatment - The water treatment industry can leverage advancements in water filtration technology to develop innovative systems that convert waste into clean water, addressing water scarcity and sanitation challenges.
3. Social Enterprise - The development and adoption of self-generated facilities like SHRI's water-filtering toilets offer disruptive innovation opportunities within the social enterprise sector, addressing public health and poverty while generating revenue through the sale of filtered water.