
University's sustainable toilet unveiled at Chelsea Flower Show
"This is a brilliant example of research and engineering which has a real-world impact and could have applications across the world to improve sanitation."He said the toilet drew on the university's expertise in advanced manufacturing, system integration and sustainable design.
The toilet processes waste on site, without the need for connection to sewers or septic tanks.It separates solid and liquid waste and uses advanced membrane filtration and thermal treatment to produce two useful by-products:Pathogen-free biochar fertiliser, a charcoal-like material that improves soil health and retains nutrientsClean, non-potable water, suitable for garden irrigation.Dr Matt Collins, senior lecturer in product design engineering at Cranfield University, said the toilet was "helping us reimagine what's possible as we advance our goal to enable widespread use of safe, sustainable sanitation services to help drive positive health, economic, and gender equality outcomes for the world's poorest people."
The Garden of the Future - featuring the toilet - has already won gold at the show."Nearly half the world's population lacks access to safe sanitation – a crisis that impacts health, education and economic opportunity, especially for women and girls," said Doulaye Kone, director of water, sanitation and hygiene at the Gates Foundation."A warming climate is compounding these challenges, making the need for innovative, water-efficient sanitation solutions more urgent than ever."
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