New research into using wood to provide low cost clean drinking water and reducing the amount of pesticides needed for crop production are among several new projects being developed by the Abdul Latif Jameel World Water and Food Security Lab (J-WAFS) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
Co-founded in 2014 by Community Jameel and MIT, J-WAFS promotes the development and deployment of technologies, policies, and programs that target diverse challenges related to the world’s water and food systems.
The technologies being developed this year include:
The demands for access to clean water and food have never been as pressing as they are today. According to a report released by the World Health Organization last month, three in ten people worldwide (approximately 2.1 billion overall) lack access to safe, readily available water. The United Nations also estimates that globally almost one in ten people fall ill every year from eating contaminated food, and 420,000 die as a result. These technologies propose solutions to these and other global water and food supply challenges.
Fady Mohammed Jameel, President of Community Jameel International, said: “From using wood to provide clean drinking water, being able to easily test the quality of milk in rural communities, and reducing the amount of pesticides being sprayed on crops, the research we are supporting at MIT has the potential to make a real difference to some of the most vulnerable people in the world. With rising populations, climate change and urbanization, we need to start taking action now to meet the world’s future needs for food and water.
“Community Jameel is proud to be a key partner of MIT in tackling some of the most pressing issues related to food and water safety and security in the Middle East and around the world.”
John Lienhard, the Abdul Latif Jameel Professor of Water and Food at MIT, said: “MIT was created to move innovative research into the real world, including a distinguished legacy of solutions for critical needs in the water and food sectors. Today, with the effects of climate change, urbanization, and rising population, water and food security is of even greater global importance. This program serves as a catalyst for entrepreneurial faculty and students to develop and commercialize technologies that can have a positive impact on the world.”
For images of the J-WAFS Solutions projects click here.