
Fungi added to dirty diaper before it is thrown away
Could baby poop and fungi work together to tackle landfill waste? That's the idea behind a new product launched by an Austin, Texas-based startup that sells disposable diapers paired with fungi intended to break down the plastic.Each of Hiro Technologies' MycoDigestible Diapers comes with a packet of fungi to be added to the dirty diaper before it is thrown in the trash. After a week or two, the fungi are activated by moisture from feces, urine and the environment to begin the process of biodegradation.Disposable diapers contribute significantly to landfill waste. An estimated 4 million tons of diapers were disposed of in the United States in 2018, with no significant recycling or composting, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Diapers take hundreds of years to naturally break down. That means the very first disposable diaper ever used is still in a landfill somewhere.To tackle this, Hiro Technologies turned to fungi. These organisms - which include mushrooms, molds, yeasts and mildew - derive nutrients from decomposing organic matter. In 2011, Yale University researchers discovered a type of fungus in Ecuador that can feed on polyurethane, a common polymer in plastic products. They figured the fungus, Pestalotiopsis microspora, would be capable of surviving on plastic in environments lacking oxygen, like landfills.Hiro Technologies co-founder Tero Isokauppila, a Finnish entrepreneur who also founded medicinal mushroom company Four Sigmatic, said there are more than 100 species of fungi now known to break down plastics."Many, many moons ago, fungi evolved to break down trees, especially this hard-to-break-down compound in trees called lignin. ... Its carbon backbone is very similar to the carbon backbone of plastics because essentially they're made out of the same thing," Isokauppila said.Three sealed jars at Hiro Technologies' lab show the stages of decomposition of a treated diaper over time. By nine months, the product appears as black soil - "just digested plastic and essentially earth," Isokauppila said.The company says it needs to do more research to find out how the product will decompose in real-world conditions in different climates and hopes to have the data to make a "consumer-facing claim" by next year. It also plans to experiment with plastic-eating fungi on adult diapers, feminine care products and other items.For now, it is selling "diaper bundles" for $35 a week online. Co-founder Miki Agrawal, who was also behind period underwear company Thinx, said the MycoDigestible Diapers had been generating excitement from consumers and investors since launching about a month ago, declining to give details. Agrawal said the company had chosen to focus on diapers as the top household plastic waste item."There is a deleterious lasting effect that we haven't really thought about and considered," Agrawal said. "Because when you throw something away, no one's asking themselves, 'Where's away?'"
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Deccan Herald
4 hours ago
- Deccan Herald
Fungi added to dirty diaper before it is thrown away
Could baby poop and fungi work together to tackle landfill waste? That's the idea behind a new product launched by an Austin, Texas-based startup that sells disposable diapers paired with fungi intended to break down the of Hiro Technologies' MycoDigestible Diapers comes with a packet of fungi to be added to the dirty diaper before it is thrown in the trash. After a week or two, the fungi are activated by moisture from feces, urine and the environment to begin the process of diapers contribute significantly to landfill waste. An estimated 4 million tons of diapers were disposed of in the United States in 2018, with no significant recycling or composting, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Diapers take hundreds of years to naturally break down. That means the very first disposable diaper ever used is still in a landfill tackle this, Hiro Technologies turned to fungi. These organisms - which include mushrooms, molds, yeasts and mildew - derive nutrients from decomposing organic matter. In 2011, Yale University researchers discovered a type of fungus in Ecuador that can feed on polyurethane, a common polymer in plastic products. They figured the fungus, Pestalotiopsis microspora, would be capable of surviving on plastic in environments lacking oxygen, like Technologies co-founder Tero Isokauppila, a Finnish entrepreneur who also founded medicinal mushroom company Four Sigmatic, said there are more than 100 species of fungi now known to break down plastics."Many, many moons ago, fungi evolved to break down trees, especially this hard-to-break-down compound in trees called lignin. ... Its carbon backbone is very similar to the carbon backbone of plastics because essentially they're made out of the same thing," Isokauppila sealed jars at Hiro Technologies' lab show the stages of decomposition of a treated diaper over time. By nine months, the product appears as black soil - "just digested plastic and essentially earth," Isokauppila company says it needs to do more research to find out how the product will decompose in real-world conditions in different climates and hopes to have the data to make a "consumer-facing claim" by next year. It also plans to experiment with plastic-eating fungi on adult diapers, feminine care products and other now, it is selling "diaper bundles" for $35 a week online. Co-founder Miki Agrawal, who was also behind period underwear company Thinx, said the MycoDigestible Diapers had been generating excitement from consumers and investors since launching about a month ago, declining to give details. Agrawal said the company had chosen to focus on diapers as the top household plastic waste item."There is a deleterious lasting effect that we haven't really thought about and considered," Agrawal said. "Because when you throw something away, no one's asking themselves, 'Where's away?'"


The Hindu
7 hours ago
- The Hindu
A free hand: on scientific institutes and GEM norms
Last week, the government issued a set of orders that scientists have heralded as 'revolutionary'. A major change is in allowing scientific institutions to bypass the Government e-Marketplace (GEM), a Commerce Ministry initiative that is meant to prioritise made-in-India equipment. GEM norms require all government purchases — from laptops to furniture — to be routed through the GEM-portal, with a mandate to buy from the vendor offering the lowest price. While technocrats in government amplified this bypass as a 'landmark' initiative to promote 'ease of doing research and development,' the fact is that until GEM-based procurement was made mandatory from 2020, the default option was to allow individual scientific institutions the freedom to make their choices regarding the vendors they procure. Take for example, sodium chloride. Something as common as table salt must be available in infinite supply and it is only proper that laboratories — they require great quantities for its myriad applications in research — source it from the supplier who offers it the cheapest. However, much like the avatars of salt — kosher, flat or sea — are uncommonly unique to the chef, the differences in purity even within common salt are critical to scientific research as well as the manufacture of pharmaceuticals. This translates to some vendors being more reliable and, therefore, more preferred. A major aspect of scientific research is about being able to reproduce results of experiments described in publications. Often, this requires fidelity to the methods and materials of the original experimenter. Given the challenge of budgets, the inability to source the right material results in experiments being junked halfway, or crimping on experimental ambition, resulting, overall, in a net loss of resources, time and effort. If this is extended to materials more complicated than salt — precision lathes, customised lab-produced diamonds, biological molecules, for example — it is easy to understand the gripe of scientists. It is understandable, and pardonable, when a government experiments with an untested policy and runs into uncharted waters or unknown unknowns. In the case of GEM, it was a known fact that India lacked an industrial base for sophisticated machinery, and it was inevitable that the hammer-head policy that saw all products as cookie-cutter nails would impede scientific research. India's scientific ministries are unique in that they are led by scientists, instead of the usual norm of having career bureaucrats. This was due to a recognition, dating back to the early years of the republic, that while science and technology can be employed to serve the state, science itself is unfettered and must be specially nurtured to be useful. A free hand is worth more than two fettered arms.


Time of India
8 hours ago
- Time of India
Torrent Pharma keen to break into big league
Ahmedabad-based Torrent Pharma is revving up for acquisitions in India as part of its plans to break into the top three drugmakers over a span of three to five years. Currently at seventh position by market share, Torrent has dramatically scaled up its India operations over the last five years with bolt-on deals for leading brands and small companies. For FY25, Torrent had sales of Rs 11,516 crore, of which India contributed Rs 6,393 crore. In the first media interaction following the announcement of his new role starting August 1, Aman Mehta , managing director-designate at Torrent Pharma, told ET that the commitment to the Indian market remains as strong as ever. "To be in the top three looks to be an ambitious but realistic goal," he said. "Even with some of the structural changes that are happening or have happened in the recent years, we believe that the inherent demand of the Indian pharma market is not going to change." by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Villa For Sale in Dubai Might Surprise You Villas in Dubai | Search ads Learn More Undo His confidence stems from a consistent growth in the Indian market compared to those like US or Europe that have been under pressure due to regulatory challenges and a headlong drop in prices of generic drugs. On a 12-month moving annual total (MAT) basis, the Indian pharma market has grown at 7.2% to Rs 2.29 lakh crore ($26.7 billion) in May. That growth is led by a mix of drugs for cardiac issues, gastrointestinal products, anti-infectives, anti-diabetes, vitamins and respiratory issues. But for Torrent, the task to take the third rank will be a tough one. Torrent must have a faster growth rate to topple giants such as Cipla , Alkem and Intas Pharma. Sun Pharma and Abbott lead the stack as the top two in the Indian market. Live Events Torrent's deals-led growth strategy is already in play. In 2022, the company shelled out Rs 2,000 crore for private equity-backed Curatio Healthcare, makers of popular cosmetic dermatology brands. More recently in December, it lapped up a set of new generation medicines to treat diabetes from German drug maker Boehringer Ingelheim. A year later in 2023, Torrent came close to buying Cipla for an audacious $7 billion deal. Although it could not be officially confirmed, the talks failed on valuation mismatch. Torrent was also named as a frontrunner to acquire a majority stake in JB Pharma from private equity firm KKR, but that deal was also called off, at least temporarily. Mehta, who has steered most deal discussions for Torrent, says the company is at a stronger position to invest further and grow business. Sheetal Sapale, VP, PharmaTrac, a data intelligence firm that tracks medicine sales, said Torrent Pharma's revenue has grown 1.6x in the last five years, with cardiac treatments making up over a fourth of its domestic sales. She added that strategic acquisitions have helped Torrent consolidate its position in pain drugs, gastrointestinal medicines and skin care range. In the last four years, Torrent has expanded its field force. From 3,600, that may now double to 7,000 medical representatives this year, which Mehta called "methodical expansion for better territorial reach".