Today’s Solutions: May 16, 2026

80 percent of the world’s sewage is dumped untreated into the natural environment. This is a huge health and environmental crisis, but traditional sewage treatment plants are costly and energy intensive, making them difficult to implement in many regions. The sewage contamination issue is particularly severe in Bangalore, India. Fortunately, local resident Tharun Kumar has come up with a solution.

Holy Cow, inspiration!

Traditional sewer plants use oxygen-fed bacteria to clean sewer water, but these require motors to provide the oxygen, driving up their cost and ecological footprint. Kumar’s design on the other hand is inspired by cow stomachs and cleans water without the need for a power source.

He and his team from ECOSTP Technologies designed a model that replicates the cow’s digestive system. Cow stomachs have four chambers that use bacteria that do not require oxygen to digest food. This food is separated out into nutrients, gas, water, and waste. The team created a sewer system with a four chamber system and uses bacteria collected from cow dung to clean wastewater in the very same way.

Anaerobic system 

As gravity moves the sewage through the plant, the anaerobic system separates out solid waste. As it sinks, the rest of the waste is converted into gas and water and you end up with wastewater that is high enough in quality for greywater use in irrigation.

So far, ECOSTP Technologies has built 50 of these plants in India and is looking to expand to Africa. Although this technology will be most useful in regions with no formal water treatment infrastructure, it could also be valuable for established systems looking to reduce their energy consumption.

 

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

A daycare built a ‘forest floor’, and it changed kids’ immu...

Time in nature is valuable for children’s physical and mental health, so one daycare in Finland decided to invest in a playground that replicated ...

Read More

This 30-minute training can help teenagers’ response to stress

Many successful people live by the expression “in every tragedy, there is an opportunity.” It turns out that the same kind of thinking can ...

Read More

The ongoing success of the 4-day workweek: a year in, companies share insights

Nearly 61 British businesses made the historic switch to a four-day workweek in 2022, setting in motion a cascade of beneficial effects that are still ...

Read More

Bartering is back: how to trade your skills and goods without spending a dime

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In a world where we’re used to swiping cards and tapping phones to pay, it might seem old-fashioned ...

Read More