Insights and resources
TOILET TOPICS - Toilets For All’s blog on relevant insights, industry news, legislative developments and more
STUDIES AND ARTICLES - on the impact of SDG6 initiatives, the toilet industry, new technologies and more
KEY ORGANISATIONS AND ENTERPRISES - a list of important organisations and businesses related to sustainable sanitation
PROJECTS AND ACTIVITIES - see the activities of Toilets for All creating impact in the sanitation space
TOILET TOPICS
Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) and benefits of container-based sanitation
Improved sanitation services impact many other sustainable development goals beyond the core SDG 6, including improving health, raising school attendance for teenage girls as a result of better sanitation in schools, generating jobs, increasing resilience to climate change thanks to the creation of energy. This article goes into details on each side and collateral benefit.
Why the waterless, container-based toilet is the solution to off-grid communities’ health, equality and economic stability
The container-based solution approach comes with circular economy benefits and provides climate positive sanitation. This includes safe containment, secure collection and transport of human excreta, and production of valuable recycling products, e.g. fertiliser and fuels. This article explains the simple 5-step life-cycle of the waterless toilet solution and explains all its added benefits.
STUDIES AND ARTICLES
An amazing 130 of the 169 UN SDG targets have synergies with sanitation. Find out the details in this study or go to our new interactive website.
Water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) are indisputable pillars of global public health. Well-implemented interventions that result in improved access to WASH by individuals and communities are necessary for the control, elimination and eradication of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) – a group of diseases prioritized by WHO given their propensity to cause suffering, deepen poverty and worsen social inequality. Progress against certain NTDs can therefore serve as a proxy for equity and effective targeting of WASH programmes.
The publication "A Sanitation Journey - Principles, Approaches and Tools for Urban Sanitation" provides an orientation to the sector’s current status and future directions, aimed at both sanitation professionals and those outside the sector. The publication describes the historical background of how urban sanitation in the Global South has developed and how the international discourse about strategies to improve urban sanitation have evolved over the past decades.
The aim of this book is to provide a basis for standardised methods for the analysis of faecal sludge from onsite sanitation technologies, for Improved communication between sanitation practitioners, and for greater confidence in the generated data.
The aim of this document is to provide an overview of the possibilities for resource recovery from sanitation and provide guidance on treatment processes to achieve safe products for reuse. The focus of this document is on resource recovery from the organic wastes managed in sanitation systems.
There are significant resources within excreta and wastewater fractions that can be recovered and turned into useful products. For example, the average person excretes 4.5 kg of nitrogen, 0.5 kg of phosphorus and 1.2 kg of potassium every year. These elements and other micronutrients found in excreta are critical for the fertilising and restoration of agricultural soils.
In order to ensure the functionality and sustainability of school sanitation facilities, proper use and maintenance is a crucial component of successful WASH implementation. This has inspired the development of the O&M – Calculate the cost mobile application, which is a product of the synergy between the Regional Fit for School Programme and Sector Programme for Sustainable Sanitation. This mobile application is geared toward helping schools calculate annual costs for WinS operation and maintenance in compliance with global recommendations on drinking water, sanitation, personal hygiene, and environmental/surface hygiene.
This report presents the state of sanitation in the world today to increase awareness of the progress made towards achieving the SDG targets for sanitation, and the challenges that remain. It calls on Member States, the United Nations system and partners to rise to these challenges within the context of the SDG 6 Global Acceleration Framework.
By presenting best practices, case studies, successes and challenges, this report seeks to inspire Member States and all stakeholders to learn from each other and work together towards achieving universal access to safe sanitation by 2030.
Project WISE will bring improved water, sanitation, and hygiene infrastructure; behavior change programs for kids and adults; and strengthened menstrual health services for girls aged 10 and above. Our goal is to demonstrate a scalable, durable, and cost-efficient WASH-in-Schools (WINS) model that can be replicated beyond the initial two target cities and countries.
Sustainable Development Goal 6 for water and sanitation calls for the realization of safely managed services (SMSS) for everyone by 2030. While there has been significant research and implementation to improve the sanitation service chain in urban settings, little guidance is available on how to achieve and sustain SMSS in rural contexts. In 2019, WSSCC commissioned this study to examine to what extent Global Sanitation Fund (GSF)-supported programmes enabled SMSS in rural areas with collective behaviour change approaches like CLTS, identify challenges, good practices, and learning needs, and generate a set of recommendations for rural sanitation programmes.
PROJECTS
With our new partner VEI Netherlands and our local partner Mobile Alert Toilet, an additional school has been equipped with new toilets and digesters to produce biogas for the school kitchen. The happy school is Rurii Primary School in Nakuru where 1,380 students will benefit.
Together with our local partner Tierra Grata, we have provided proper sanitation in 2 additional schools in the north east of Colombia:
Kaintamana School in El Pájaro
Uyaraica School in Manaure
Our Kenyan partner Mobile Alert Toilet finished a second school sanitation project producing biogas for the school kitchen at the Kingothua Primary School (ex-Raini School) in Banana Hill, North of Nairobi, Kenya.
Together with our local partner Tierra Grata, we have provided proper sanitation in 4 additional schools in the north east of Colombia.
A total of almost 300 kids can profit from the new dignified sanitation solutions.
Together with our local partner Mobile Alert Toilets, T4A implemented its first fully circular sanitation solution at the Ikinu Primary School in Githunguri State, Kenya with 1,400 students. Biogas reactors now provide biogas to the school kitchen to provide warm meals to the students.
Watch a video to learn more about the whole project.
Together with our new partner Extra Mile Development Foundation (EMDEF) in Malawi, we recently finished the construction of a Boys Urinal Block at St Dominic Primary School in Mzimba North, Malawi. This new urinal serves the 207 students attending the school and was urgently needed as heavy flooding destroyed the old toilet stall last December.
We have finished our first project with our new partner in Namibia, the local enterprise Flushh led by the innovative entrepreneur Kaveto Tjatjara. We have paid 70 % of the cost of installing 6 toilets for the Sigurugur Primary School with 750 students and 1 toilet for Twinkle Stars kindergarten. Both are located in the rapidly growing informal settlement in Rundu, Namibia.
Our pilot project with Mosan in the Atitlan Eco School in Jabalito on Lago Atitlan was succesfully finished. 20 students are profiting from a brand new toilet, a shower and handwashing station. The kids showed a very enthusiastic response during the opening ceremony and are using the toilets actively.
We have a new partner in Colombia, the impact enterprise Tierra Grata in Cartagena. They have installed proper toilets in 4 schools in Northern Colombia in the departments of La Guajira: Waimpretu, Jouwuo, Kasuchi and Jaiskatin. You can find further pictures about the projects here plus a nice video portrait of Tierra Grata by the WEF.
We continued with our partners Urimat in Switzerland and Mobile Alert Toilets in Nairobi and just finished another school . Humble School has 186 students and has now 2 toilets for girls and 2 for boys as well urinals for boys provided by Urimat. We are very thankful to the leading global dry urinal company Urimat for their very valuable support of the project and look forward to strengthen the collaboration.