Speakers at the Earthshot Prize Innovation Summit included: New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Arden, Her Majesty Queen Rania Al Abdullah, Cate Blanchett, Matt Damon, Bill Gates, Earthshot Prize Finalists and Winners, Oscar the Grouch, and many more Bloomberg Philanthropies announced more than $20 million in new funding to help replicate and turbocharge the work of…
Jul 18, 2021
Kumamoto – Startup companies are acquiring a growing presence in the field of disaster prevention and reduction, leveraging their strength in technology and their ability to quickly develop goods and services responding to actual needs in afflicted areas.
Wota Corp. released a portable recycled water treatment device in 2019. Called Wota Box, it is capable of making 98% of the water that is discharged after showers, handwashing and laundry reusable. With the quality of water managed by artificial intelligence technology, Wota Box makes potable water available when the supply of water is cut off.
More than 20 local governments have introduced the device for use at times of disaster.
High-tech startups breaking into disaster prevention field Today 06:00 am JST Today | 06:46 am JST KUMAMOTO
Startup companies are acquiring a growing presence in the field of disaster prevention and reduction, leveraging their strength in technology and their ability to quickly develop goods and services responding to actual needs in afflicted areas.
Wota Corp released a portable recycled water treatment device in 2019. Called Wota Box, it is capable of making 98 percent of the water that is discharged after showers, handwashing and laundry reusable. With the quality of water managed by artificial intelligence technology, Wota Box makes drinkable water available when the supply of water is cut off.
FEATURE: High-tech startups breaking into disaster prevention field
Startup companies are acquiring a growing presence in the field of disaster prevention and reduction, leveraging their strength in technology and their ability to quickly develop goods and services responding to actual needs in afflicted areas.
Wota Corp. released a portable recycled water treatment device in 2019. Called Wota Box, it is capable of making 98 percent of the water that is discharged after showers, handwashing and laundry reusable. With the quality of water managed by artificial intelligence technology, Wota Box makes drinkable water available when the supply of water is cut off.
Photo taken on March 30, 2021, in Tokyo shows Yosuke Maeda, president of Wota Corp., next to the Wota Box, a portable recycled water treatment device used in disasters. (Kyodo)
Dec 21, 2020
Shoppers have been washing their hands and sterilizing their smartphones recently in the streets of Tokyo’s Ginza district using handwashing stations that a Japanese start-up hopes will revolutionize access to clean water and better hygiene.
WOTA Corp. set up 20 of its WOSH machines near popular stores in the area in an initiative with a district association aimed at encouraging shoppers to wash their hands to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.
The machines don’t require a connection to running water and don’t use fresh and waste water tanks. Instead they recycle the water through a three-stage process of membrane filtration, chlorine and deep ultraviolet irradiation.