We are Bangalore based company involved with Bio-Remediation of water bodies, Lakes, Aqua culture, Organic fish cultivation, soil detox and enhance soil fertility etc.
Recently we have given trial to Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai to clean the dirtiest Irla Rasraj nallah, Vile Parle west, Mumbai. The results have satisfied the Corporation and negotiation is on to take up further for desilting of other lakes and
sewage canals in Mumbai.
Our technology has vast advantage over the STP which consume huge power for aeration purpose and treat the water only at site where as our Bio-Tech treats the water throughout the canal during flow from starting to end point. Our Bio enzymes keep working for 10days reacting with the organic silt and vapourise the pollutants into other non-toxic gas. The water analysis before and after our treatment shows huge improvements between 80 – 98% reduction in pollutants depending on retention time before testing point.
Once organic silt is reduced phenomenally, the weeds will reduce automatically and the whole canal gets cleaned up allowing smooth flow of sewage. This inturn will stop mosquito breeding in stagnant places due to speed of sewage flow. This will definitely benefit the city vastly in curbing avoidable expenditure.
Our charges depend on volume of water to be treated on daily basis in MLD. Ahmedabad has more than 1500MLD of sewage water to be treated every day. This treated water can be used for various purposes including agriculture. The treated water also eliminates end users from risk of water toxicity and health hazards. It might also be suggested that this treated water be used as recycled water for gardening, horticultural purposes, industrial etc.
We are capable of taking up the entire city Drain / sewage system cleaning which will be completed in 8-10 months time. Our technology can be put to use at shortest notice and minimum space without any permanent installation of any machinery. A single person per point can effectively manage the whole operation with ease.



