The Artdog Image of Interest
These Cambodians are making life-saving devices. Those things that look like flowerpots are actually ceramic water purifiers. They save lives by making it possible for people to have clean, safe drinking water, even when their only water source is a muddy, polluted river. They've dramatically cut down on diarrheal illnesses since they were first introduced in 2002. That they can be made locally and employ local people is an added bonus.
The filters work surprisingly well, for such a low-tech solution. They eliminate approximately 99.88% of water-borne disease agents.
As far as I could discover, the principle was first developed by Henry Doulton, a Victorian pottery manufacturer (his father co-founded the Royal Doulton company), who was inspired by the discoveries of Louis Pasteur.
IMAGE: Many thanks to cfile Daily for this image and an informative story to go with it.
These Cambodians are making life-saving devices. Those things that look like flowerpots are actually ceramic water purifiers. They save lives by making it possible for people to have clean, safe drinking water, even when their only water source is a muddy, polluted river. They've dramatically cut down on diarrheal illnesses since they were first introduced in 2002. That they can be made locally and employ local people is an added bonus.
The filters work surprisingly well, for such a low-tech solution. They eliminate approximately 99.88% of water-borne disease agents.
As far as I could discover, the principle was first developed by Henry Doulton, a Victorian pottery manufacturer (his father co-founded the Royal Doulton company), who was inspired by the discoveries of Louis Pasteur.
In honor of Social
Justice February, this month I'm exploring innovative, sustainable
technologies for delivering clean water to populations in need. The United Nations declared in 2010 that access
to clean water and sanitation is a basic human right, and called upon all
nations to help ensure that "safe, clean, accessible and affordable
drinking water and sanitation" should be accessible to everyone on the
earth. Yet such access is unavailable to literally billions of people,
and the pressures of climate change and population
growth make the problem worse each year.
IMAGE: Many thanks to cfile Daily for this image and an informative story to go with it.
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