I am a staff writer for Justmeans on Social Enterprise. When I am not writing for Justmeans, I wear my other hat as a PR professional. Over the years I have worked with high-profile organisations within the public, not-for-profit and corporate sectors; and won awards from my industry. I now run my own UK consultancy, Serendipity PR & Media; I am a firm believer in the power of serendipity...
Social Innovation to Reinvent the Toilet

It is ridiculous when you realise that the present day toilet is a 19th century contraption, which has not moved with the times, and consequently does not meet the needs of most of the world's population. There are approximately 2.6 billion people without access to sewer-linked systems who are forced to use simple latrines, holes in the ground or just the nearest available spot; a situation that can lead to many health problems. Therefore, one of the new social innovation toilets being financed by the Foundation is a hope for the future. It is a compact chamber that runs on solar power from a roof panel and uses built-in electrochemical technology to process waste.
Dr. Frank Rijsberman, an executive at the Foundation thinks chemical engineering might be the social innovation solution to inventing future toilets, as instead of composting waste for six months, as many waterless composting toilets do, the new types could heat the waste quickly, killing harmful bacteria.
One of the social innovation funded projects taking this approach forward is a design for waste disposal at community bathrooms in South Africa. Dr Katherine Foxon from the University of KwaZulu, Durban and a member of the team that is working on this technology says, "We'll process the waste chemically, combusting the faeces and using that energy to drive the evaporation of urine." Dealing with urine separately, by draining it off to local storage tanks, simplifies waste water management as the urine can be collected, treated and recycled as fertilizer.
The efforts of the Foundation and the issues that the competition is addressing are significant. The planet needs toilets that are cheap and which can be used by more than two billion poor people. 'Reinvent the Toilet' has so far created social innovation toilet models that have the potential to provide good solutions. What is critical in all these efforts is that the teams come up with a design that is economically possible. This research and work is worthwhile; and not a waste; eventually it will help to improve the lives of many more people.
Photo Credit: Nedrichards











