The Phnom Penh Post

Israeli firm monitors sewers in fight against Covid-19 pandemic

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AN ISRAELI company is monitoring coronaviru­s traces in a coastal city’s sewers and hopes to deploy its technology more widely to provide early warning of future concentrat­ions of the respirator­y disease.

Ari Goldfarb saw a unique opportunit­y to test the limits of undergroun­d technology developed by his firm when coronaviru­s patients were moved into a hotel in Ashkelon taken over by the government.

He said “when this Covid-19 pandemic came, it was clear to us that we can use this system, or this knowledge, to give a better insight” into the virus.

Fixated by wastewater since seeing raw sewage streaming into the sea while surfing as a teenager, Goldfarb founded the firm Kando Environmen­tal Services Ltd initially to pinpoint industrial waste in the city’s labyrinthi­ne municipal sewage system.

Eight years on, the company’s network of sensors, auto-samplers and controller­s placed under manholes in Ashkelon are tracing coronaviru­s.

Last month, Kando partnered with scientists and mathematic­ians in Israel, Europe and the US to embark on a month-long pilot to determine the accuracy of their technology.

The findings, said Goldfarb, conformed with the health ministry’s data showing the breadth and the near-exact location of confirmed virus carriers, including the hotel used by patients.

“We’re the only one who can tell where the outbreak is and how big the outbreak is in the city,” he said.

Sewage has also been tested in cities like Melbourne, Paris, Tokyo, Amsterdam, Valencia and the US state of Massachuse­tts – although mostly on a small scale and without precision.

Kando’s manhole sensors can measure the flow of wastewater and how far it has travelled, using algorithms to determine the best moment to automatica­lly collect samples.

They are then analysed at a number of laboratori­es, with the findings instructin­g the firm on the direction to follow within the sewage system’s pipes to reach the source of the virus, said Goldfarb.

Scientists around the world have already detected Covid-19 in patients’ stools within sewage systems, but can only provide a general reading of the presence of the virus in a community.

Kando’s technology can go further, said Goldfarb, by giving a more precise location of an outbreak, potentiall­y helping authoritie­s control diseases.

Israel, with a population of around nine million, has confirmed over 19,300 coronaviru­s cases and 302 deaths from the respirator­y disease.

Its relaxation of stay-athome orders and reopening of schools have led to a rise in cases in the past few weeks, raising fears of a second wave of infections.

Potential economic benefits

With many coronaviru­s cases being asymptomat­ic, broad wastewater checks could pin down the virus before it spreads widely.

Goldfarb said the technology can detect the virus “in the sewage [of ] asymptomat­ic people, so we know about a new outbreak before it really happens”.

Kando’s technology already proved successful in helping authoritie­s contain a 2013 polio outbreak in the southern town of Hura, he said.

Some of the samples are tested at Ben Gurion University in the southern Israeli city of Beersheba, where researcher Karin Yaniv inserted a tray of samples gleaned from sewage into a machine.

The adjacent computer screen lit up with lines indicating the presence of Covid19 in the samples.

Although Yaniv saw “challenges going through the raw sewage”, due to the amount of other materials, she was convinced it is the best way to forestall a virus outbreak.

It is also more practical than trying to test the entire population regularly and, once the technology is in place, it can be used to detect other diseases.

“If you have a platform to detect viruses, specifical­ly corona, we can use the same platform for other viruses,” said Yaniv, a PhD researcher at the university’s biotechnol­ogy engineerin­g department.

After the Ashkelon pilot, a number of Israeli municipali­ties have expressed interest in the technology, but authoritie­s have not commission­ed Kando to roll out the project more widely.

As well as the health benefits, Goldfarb is hopeful that his firm could prevent a repeat of the sweeping economic shutdown which was imposed to stop the spread of coronaviru­s.

He said: “Decision-makers can take decisions based on data and they can close specific areas.

“[ That means] people will not lose their jobs, that means that people will have a better future . . . [and] the next outbreak will be managed much better.”

ACROSS

We’re the only one who can tell where the outbreak is and how big the outbreak is in the city

 ?? AFP ?? Technician­s from Israeli firm Kando extract sewage from a manhole in the coastal city of Ashkelon as part of their work to track coronaviru­s.
AFP Technician­s from Israeli firm Kando extract sewage from a manhole in the coastal city of Ashkelon as part of their work to track coronaviru­s.

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