Description
In this episode, we dive into the groundbreaking sanitation work of SOIL (Sustainable Organic Integrated Livelihoods), a nonprofit that is redefining what safe, dignified sanitation looks like in dense urban communities.
Operating in Haiti, where traditional sewer systems are often impractical or nonexistent, SOIL pioneered a container-based sanitation model that provides households with clean, affordable toilets—paired with a reliable waste collection service. Instead of treating human waste as a problem to hide, SOIL treats it as a resource, safely transforming collected waste into compost that supports agriculture and environmental restoration.
The episode explores how SOIL’s flagship household toilet service, EkoLakay, works in practice, why it succeeds where conventional infrastructure fails, and how user-centered design, community trust, and operational discipline make the model scalable. We also unpack the broader implications of SOIL’s approach: improving public health, reducing environmental contamination, creating green jobs, and demonstrating how circular economy principles can work in the world’s most challenging contexts.
More than a sanitation program, SOIL is a powerful example of systems thinking—showing how social innovation can deliver dignity, resilience, and sustainability at the same time.
Key words
SOIL Sanitation, container-based sanitation, urban sanitation, Haiti, circular economy, waste-to-resource, social innovation, public health, sustainable sanitation, inclusive infrastructure, environmental justice, global development