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The Tiger Toilet is linked to a normal pour flush system, so the user experience is therefore the same as using a septic tank or a pour flush latrine. The waste then enters a tank which contains the worms and a drainage layer. The solids are trapped at the top of the system where the worms consume it, and the liquid is filtered through the drainage layer. Extensive laboratory scale trials found that the worms reduce the solids in the system by above 80%, and the effluent quality is higher than that from a septic tank. An initial prototype has been running at the Centre for Alternative Technology in Wales, UK for over a year.
USAID’s Stage 1 investment will support a six-month trial of this Tiger Toilet system in three countries: India, Uganda, and Myanmar. This ambitious pilot will not only test the technology in three different geographic locations, but also in three different contexts: rural communities, peri-urban areas, and a displaced persons camp. It will be the first trial of the Tiger Toilet with real households.
It is called the 'tiger [worm] toilet' because of the use of striped tiger worms as being most effective in the system. See
https://www.flickr.com/photos/64611767@N08/13665795253 for a photograph of this worm.
I am looking for a neologism (?) in Greek to describe this invention.
USAID’s Stage 1 investment will support a six-month trial of this Tiger Toilet system in three countries: India, Uganda, and Myanmar. This ambitious pilot will not only test the technology in three different geographic locations, but also in three different contexts: rural communities, peri-urban areas, and a displaced persons camp. It will be the first trial of the Tiger Toilet with real households.
It is called the 'tiger [worm] toilet' because of the use of striped tiger worms as being most effective in the system. See
https://www.flickr.com/photos/64611767@N08/13665795253 for a photograph of this worm.
I am looking for a neologism (?) in Greek to describe this invention.