In 2010 the United Nations General Assembly found that : “Safe
drinking water and sanitation are human rights. Access to these services,
including water and soap for handwashing, is fundamental to human health and
well-being. They are essential to improving nutrition, preventing disease and
enabling health care…”
From the recent update, U.N. Report, SUMMARY PROGRESS UPDATE 2021 WATER AND SANITATION FOR ALL:
Since 2015, over 600
million people have gained access to safely managed drinking water services.
Globally, three out of four people used safely managed drinking water services
in 2020. However, that means that 2 billion people still lacked available drinking
water when needed and free from contamination in 2020. The number of city
inhabitants lacking safely managed drinking water has increased nearly doubling
since 2000 to 771 million people. Each year more than 1 million people are
estimated to die from diarrhea as a result of unsafe drinking-water, sanitation
and hand hygiene. In addition, another 250,000 to 500,000 die from
schistosomiasis and other waterborne diseases.
from UN Report |
Even in the United States not everyone has accessible and safe drinking water. According to a 2022 report from DigDeep, around 2 million Americans lack access to running water and/or a flush toilet. This number includes the estimated 560,000 homeless population in our cities and communities that we see every day (and has increased with the influx of undocumented immigrants to our cities), but there are over 1,400,000 mostly rural Americans who are housed but lack running water and basic indoor plumbing. These are the invisible poor that include poor populations located in the rural south and West Virginia, undocumented immigrant communities along the Mexico-United States border, poor communities in the central valley of California and Native American communities in the Navajo Nation.
As an alternative to maintaining and improving our water
treatment and distribution system, social scientists suggest that the future of
water is “off-grid” water treatment. This might be a strategy for the global poor, not one we should find acceptable in the United States. As one of their products, Folia Materials
a small business in Boston has developed an easy to use paper water filter that
could help solve this problem. Theresa Dankovich while working on her PhD in
Chemistry at McGill University in Montreal invented a method to
synthetize silver
nanoparticle within blotting paper, which could be directly used as
powerful antibacterial filters.
Dr. Dankovich utilized that technology to co-found (with environmental
scientist Jonathan Levine PhD) Folia Materials, a Boston-based small business, to commercialize the coating technology. Folia spent years inventing
and patenting the world’s cheapest and most effective process for coating
ordinary paper that transforms it into an extraordinary useful products. It can be used to
replace plastic, filter out germs and viruses in face masks and to purify water.
The fundamental technology is a food-safe, green-chemistry
process that forms silver nanoparticles ionically bonded to cellulosic fibers.
The company holds the patents on the industrial coating process and aqueous
paper coating formulation, which consists of metal salts and catalysts that
reduce the silver and bond it to the cellulosic fibers during the coating
process.
According to Chemical Engineering Progress: "Manufacturing costs for all products are minimized by using plant-based food ingredients as green chemistry catalysts and silver nanoparticles to minimize the amount of silver required, as well as being able to directly utilize existing paper, coating and packing equipment with no capital modifications required."
from FWG website |
The water filtration product was placed in a separate subsidiary, Folia Water Global, to focus on solving the global safe drinking water problem. Their product can filter 20 liters of water for $0.20. This will make the filter an inexpensive grocery shelf product that can deliver safe drinking water. This is possible because manufacturing process uses commodity inputs and standard industrial coating machinery. This is a miracle that is being piloted in Bangladesh . The commercial scale-up is expected to generate enough business and sales data to attract a national distributor. Once they have a national distributor in Bangladesh, they plan to expand in India, Nepal, Kenya, Indonesia, and Vietnam. Folia Water Global and their partners hope to scale the product to $1 billion a year by 2032.
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