The
WASH Alliance prize of $15,000 was awarded to the Stanford Program on Water,
Health and Development. Researchers have designed a community-scale, fully
automated chlorine dosing device for shared water points in low-income urban
settings that requires neither reliable electricity nor 24/7 supply to function
consistently. Support from the Reed Elsevier Environmental Challenge will allow
them to be able to construct, install and maintain 150 devices serving 10,000
people in Dhaka, Bangladesh. These installation sites will be used to evaluate health
impacts and test the viability of different potential business models.
See the Lotus Water website for more information about this ambitious project!
See the Lotus Water website for more information about this ambitious project!
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