Bioremediation

Bioremediation = Science and Nature working together….

Governments, environmental scientists, and industry, particularly the Sanitation, Commercial Trade Waste, Oil/Petrochemical sector are under increasing pressure to find ways to reduce and dispose of pollutants/waste without damaging the environment or exposing operatives to toxic and combustible environments. BIG has developed a range of non-pathogenic bacterial treatments that digest (eat) pollutants/waste in situ.  There is a mountain of evidence from every University in the world that endorse the good that bacteria do and its three main elements for survival and effectiveness:

  1. Food
  2. Oxygen
  3. Water

By understanding bacterium and their requirements, it can be used to germinate, colonise and multiply if it is provided with the three elements above. In simple terms, pollutants and waste are the food source for bacteria.

Bacterial international is focused on working with governments, academia, public and private organizations to focus on utilizing the technology upstream preventing the sludge and pollution from entering the water and soils in the first place.

Using the global Waste Hierarchy, we commit to prevention first and foremost and if not prevention, we deliver a reusable resource of water to be used in irrigation and cleaning.

4 pillars drive our focus:

  1. Environmental Protection / reducing damage
  2. Reducing toxicity of waste
  3. Reducing the volume of wastes
  4. Safe reuse and recycling

Commitment from the World Economic Forum.

The scale of the world’s human waste problem is vast, impacting human health, coastal and terrestrial ecosystems, and even climate change.  Solving the problem requires working with communities to develop solutions that suit them, providing access to adequate sanitation and adapting aging sewage systems to a rapidly changing world.

Decentralized and nature-based solutions are considered key to cleaning up urban wastewater issues and reducing pressure on, or providing affordable and effective alternatives to, centralized sewage systems.

Feb 1, 2022, World Economic Forum