Ceramic water filter rdi cambodia october 19 2018 rdi is glad to see that our friends in vietnam are getting the ceramic water filters to schools in vietnam.
Ceramic water filter cambodia.
Rdic s operation started at a small scale as it developed its manufacturing techniques.
It is cheap portable effective and can be used and maintained even by the poorest families lerman says.
There are 3 active factories in cambodia today producing 5500 ceramic water filters per month which have been tested to reduce e coli by 99 99 percent.
August 2007 field note the water and sanitation program.
Clean drinking water for all of southeast asia.
Water filter use to sieve adsorption ion exchanges and other processes to remove unwanted substances from water in cambodia.
The filters are distributed and marketed.
This project will improve access to clean drinking water and reduce emissions by selling affordable ceramic water filters to rural households in cambodia.
To use the ceramic filters families fill the top receptacle or the ceramic filter itself with water which flows through the ceramic filter or filters into a storage receptacle.
The ceramic filter is a clay pot that holds approximately 10 litres allowing a family to produce up to 30 litres a day.
The crc is distributing one ceramic water filter to some 6 000 households in 53 villages.
Ceramic water filters provide affordable high quality drinking water at a household or classroom level for communities who are otherwise without access to safe drinking water.
Use of ceramic water filters in cambodia ceramic filter pilot projects 2002 2006 in cambodia have yielded promising results that suggest these interventions can be effective in improving drinking water quality and can contribute to substantial health gains in populations using them.
The filter is flowerpot shaped holds about 8 10 liters of water and sits inside a plastic or ceramic receptacle.
Resource development international cambodia rdic has been making ceramic water filters in cambodia since 2003.
Over the seven year crediting period water filters will be provided to up to 1 7 million people across a potential 312 000 households.
This system is especially valuable in areas where electricity is not available or where minimal understanding of germs and water born illness is prevalent.