Sunday, June 14, 2026
ADVT 
India

How Thai Research Can Help In Clean India Mission

Bajinder Pal Singh IANS, 31 May, 2016 12:09 PM
    As India grapples with an immense and seemingly insurmountable sanitation crisis, a Thailand-based international institute could show the way on tackling this challenge.
     
    The Asian Institute of Technology (AIT) has unveiled four sanitation and toilet-related innovations as an example on how technology is emerging as a solution to sanitation problems.
     
    "The biggest challenge is untreated waste, and we have successfully demonstrated how technology can be used to help solve this problem," said Thammarat Koottatep, an environmental engineer who unveiled four sanitation innovations.
     
    Among them is a truck that auto-cleans human waste.
     
    "The concept is very simple. The vacuum operated truck collects all the human waste, and the equipment fitted inside the truck cleans the liquid and solid waste, converting it into fertilizer," Thammarat said.
     
     
    Another example of innovative technology is a toilet that uses solar energy to degrade bacteria and kill pathogens, facilitates bio-degradation of organic matter and produces better quality of septic tank effluents. A prototype of the solar toilet, which was demonstrated at New Delhi during the World Toilet Fair in 2015, is now ready for implementation after a series of pilot tests and field testing.
     
    A third innovation is a toilet based on the principle of a cyclone where the human waste is separated into solid and liquid using the principles of gravity. The fourth product involves retro-fitting a septic tank to ensure proper treatment of human waste.
     
    "We realized that technology can help solve this problem, and that is why after four years of research and courtesy of financial support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, we have created four innovative products," the engineer added.
     
     
    Doulay Kone, a deputy director of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, who helped support the project, stated that Thammarat and his team had been working on it since 2011.
     
    "Now that the technology is ready, we are eagerly looking forward towards its implementation in both Asia and Africa," Kone said.
     
    Kone knows the region very well, and at the Fecal Sludgement Management Conference in Vietnam last year, he had led a team of experts and professionals from all over the world to salute the Swachh Bharat (Clean India) campaign.
     
    "One in three people or 2.4 billion people in this world are still without adequate sanitation facilities," said AIT president Worsak Kanok-Nukulchai, adding: "These innovations show how universities and research organizations can come out of their ivory towers and work towards solving the problems of the people."
     
     
    The World Bank estimates that inadequate sanitation costs India the equivalent of 6.4 percent of GDP. A staggering one-third of India's population defecates in the open. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Woman killed in Pakistani firing on LoC

    Woman killed in Pakistani firing on LoC
    A woman was killed Saturday in firing by Pakistani soldiers on the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir's Baramulla district, police said....

    Woman killed in Pakistani firing on LoC

    AAP to chop half of 2013 candidates; first list out likely coming week

    AAP to chop half of 2013 candidates; first list out likely coming week
    Aiming to repeat its 2013 showing and in the face of the Narendra Modi-led BJP juggernaut, the AAP has begun formulating a poll-winning strategy which...

    AAP to chop half of 2013 candidates; first list out likely coming week

    Is there any hope for Congress?

    Is there any hope for Congress?
    The Congress high command, which means the mother-and-son duo of Sonia and Rahul Gandhi, is mistaken if it believes that the deep nervousness among....

    Is there any hope for Congress?

    Kiss of Love protest in Delhi, 70 detained

    Kiss of Love protest in Delhi, 70 detained
    As a gawking crowd watched, scores of activists Saturday locked lips in the midst of a busy Delhi street to protest moral policing and support the Kiss of Love....

    Kiss of Love protest in Delhi, 70 detained

    Two CRPF men injured in Kashmir guerrilla attack

    Two CRPF men injured in Kashmir guerrilla attack
    Two Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) troopers were injured Saturday when guerrillas fired at a security force vehicle on Srinagar-Jammu national....

    Two CRPF men injured in Kashmir guerrilla attack

    Four soldiers, civilian missing in Kashmir avalanche

    Four soldiers, civilian missing in Kashmir avalanche
    Four soldiers, including a junior commissioned officer, and a civilian were trapped under an avalanche in Jammu and Kashmir's Kupwara district Saturday and....

    Four soldiers, civilian missing in Kashmir avalanche