Innovative Waterless Toilet
MUMBAI: This is Dry San Hygienic
Rural Toilet. It is a waterless system where waste doesn't have to be flushed.
Prof Dr Kishore Munshi, senior professor and former dean of the Industrial
Design Center at IIT-B, has developed the Dry San to reduce open defecation,
improve hygiene, and help vulnerable sections including women and children.
"The project has been developed for rural India, targetting mainly the
farming community with the basic premise that there is dearth of water in most
rural areas. Thus, the flush toilet cannot be part of the solution.
Therefore, an autonomous solution based on water-less or minimal water
usage was invented," said Prof Munshi. The Dry San has been developed
after garnering financial support from the Ministry of Drinking Water and
Sanitation, along with CTech, an IIT-B incubated designed company. It comes in
various dimensions, along with an easy manual.
While work on the project started in 2011, the final product was ready by
2014. For starters, a design was put in place, which is not only easy to build
but maintain too. "In the conventional water-based sanitation system,
there is heavy use of water to maintain the water-trap and for flushing
requirements.
Flush-toilets and sewerage systems not only involve huge infrastructure and
high maintenance costs, they also cannot ensure a clean environment. In case of
failure, they pose a far greater risk to public health and environment, which
is more likely to happen in rural, semi-urban situations," said Prof
Munshi.
The Dry-San converts waste material, which otherwise pollutes land and
water bodies, into a resource (fertiliser from urine and manure from solid
waste) for the farmer. The conversion is done by non-chemical and natural
aerobic decomposition, facilitated by a patented design.
Another highlight that sets this design apart from others is that, while in
septic tanks, there are chances of poisonous gases leading to explosions, there
are no gases formed in Dry San's underground pit. Water is seeped into the soil
and only solid waste remains, which eventually decomposes.
"If a family of five uses this toilet every day, they can open the pit
once in eight or 10 years to clean the decomposed waste, which can easily be
used as fertilizer," added Prof Munshi. While there have been various sanitation
projects introduced by the government, most have lacked maintenance.
"During an all-India survey, we found out that most public toilets use
ceramic tiles, which eventually give away and make the toilet unusable.
Instead, our design uses stainless steel - easy to use and maintain," he
said. Building one Dry San toilet from scratch can cost up to Rs. 70,000,
including labour cost. This cost can be reduced if they are built in bulk.
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