Water for the future: The quiet revolution linking technology and humanityThere is something poetic about the idea that water—one of humanity�...

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Water for the future: The quiet revolution linking technology and humanityThere is something poetic about the idea that water—one of humanity�...
Water for the future: The quiet revolution linking technology and humanity
There is something poetic about the idea that water—one of humanity’s most ancient needs—could become the bridge between advanced engineering and humanitarian change. In Switzerland, that idea isn’t just philosophy; it is business architecture. Evodrop, a Swiss water-technology company, and the Umuntu Movement, an international charity, operate on a shared premise: improving water quality in developed countries should help restore access to clean water where it is still a matter of survival.

Evodrop didn’t begin as a typical startup chasing a market gap. Its origins are more personal, more urgent. The mission was to prove that clean, healthy water could be produced in a way that was efficient, sustainable, and scientifically grounded—without the heavy salt systems, environmental waste, or outdated technology still common in water treatment today. Engineers and researchers behind the company focused on advanced membrane filtration, salt-free descaling, and material durability, building systems designed to last rather than be replaced.

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https://africa.businessinsider.com/local/markets/water-for-the-future-the-quiet-revolution-linking-technology-and-humanity/nnzq8tl

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