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Monday, October 7, 2013

Reinventing the Toilet in India | Impatient Optimists


Gandhi said “Sanitation is more important than independence”. To demonstrate his commitment he made cleanliness and sanitation an integral part of the Gandhian way of living and believed in total sanitation for all.
October 2, 2013, is the 144th birthday of Bapu and what better way for the Bill & Melinda Gates to celebrate this profound and inspirational leader, than to announce our new partnership with The Department of Biotechnology (DBT), Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of India in joint funding the Biotechnology Industry Research Assistance Council (BIRAC) to launch the Reinvent the Toilet Challenge – India.
If you are not immersed in the issues facing global sanitation, you should be. At the moment, 2.5 billion people don’t have access to safe sanitation. Safe sanitation, that could save the lives of 1.5 million kids under the age of 5 globally every year and prevent so much sickness and suffering for 40% of the world’s population.
At 1.27 billion people, India is the second most populous country in the world. Although, around 275 million people gained access to improved sanitation between 1990 and 2011, 615 million still defecated in the open in 2011[1].
And, millions of tons of fecal sludge collected from pit latrines and septic tanks are discharged untreated into the environment, creating a horrendous health hazard. A recent UNICEF report on sanitation in India showed that poor sanitation is responsible for the stunting of 62 million children under the age of 5; these kids will never reach their full physical or mental potential.
This is why we are investing in opportunities that extend affordable sanitation services to poor communities through innovations in business models, government policies and technologies that will develop a “next generation toilet” that kills all pathogens, is self-contained, is affordable, and that people want to use.
So, India has a sanitation problem, and it recognizes this. The exciting thing about our new partnership with the Indian government is that India is ranked fourth in manufacturing competiveness by Deloitte,and sees a way to reduce poverty through innovation and manufacturing, while having “the capacity to emerge as the second best destination for manufacturing in the world in terms of its strength in design and technology, resource base, rich pool of young talented people and entrepreneurial spirit” (Ajay Shankar). That, to us, sounds like a recipe for a solution to the sanitation crisis, not just for India, but also the entire planet.
So on this auspicious day, we are very proud to see the Gates foundation join forces with DBT and BIRAC, to embrace the creativity, tenacity and capability of the people of India with all our sights set on achieving an aspiration of Mahatma Gandhi.
For more information about this challenge, visit here. For details on how to apply, visit here.