Is LifeStraw a silver bullet water purification solution for travelling in India?

Is LifeStraw a silver bullet water purification solution for travelling in India? - Two White and Yellow Pineapples on Brown Dirt

LifeStraw has a 0.2 micron filter. Since "most bacteria are 0.2 µm in diameter and 2-8 µm in length" (source), is it safe to drink water from any source using LifeStraw without boiling? (India in particular) Or should I better use water purification tablets?

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Best Answer

To add to Thorsten's excellent and quite accurate answer:

No, it takes quite a lot more than that to create perfectly safe water. For example, here's my Indian water purification system. I know it's not feasible for travellers, but I'm including it to illustrate just how much is actually needed to get really pure water: enter image description here

Some things to note about it:

  • It needs electricity to pump water through a very fine membrane (and another, rougher one). This process is known as reverse osmosis. It's the same technology that's used to create the vast majority of bottled water in India. It needs an electric pump because the holes in the membrane are so tiny that even viruses can't get through. This makes pumping harder, and also means that there's a significant amount of wastewater that doesn't make it through the membrane, but goes back out into the ground instead.
  • It has an additional ultra-violet filter which kills any number of microorganisms that might have made it through the membrane somehow. This is for absolute redundancy.
  • It removes all dangerous chemicals, metals, minerals, salts, etc. from the water as well. This is needed where I live, since there are plenty of unhealthy substances in the ground water. The water that goes in shows roughly 600 parts per million of dissolved solids. (I measure it myself with a meter.) The output has around 20. (My machine also adds some healthy minerals to the water.)
  • I paid 13.000 INR for that machine, while the LifeStraw sells for 1100 INR on Indian Amazon.

Needless to say, much of this can not be accomplished by the LifeStraw.

Many parts of India have severe problems with industrial waste draining into the ground water. In the area where I live, there's no sewage or drainage system. Much of the household sewage and wastewater (as well as industrial and agricultural waste) goes directly into the ground. That includes detergents, chemicals, pesticides, feaces, etc. from factories, farms and households.

In some areas, water comes from lakes and rivers, and these are often polluted and contaminated as well.

I use RO water for cooking too. So does any halfway decent restaurant. Such restaurants and households have their own RO machines.

Use bottled water.

For short trips I certainly recommend bottled water.




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Is LifeStraw a silver bullet water purification solution for travelling in India? - Cheerful young woman with refreshing drink in automobile during car trip
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Is LifeStraw a silver bullet water purification solution for travelling in India? - Mountain during Golden Hour



Can I use LifeStraw in India?

So lifestraw is safe everywhere, including India. Just need to trust it first ;) if you have a doubt, start using it to brush your teeth, then have a sip, then you'll notice that it's fine and you can use it normally!

Can you drink any water with LifeStraw?

With the LifeStraw, you can drink directly from a water source (such as a stream, mud puddle, or lake), but keep in mind the ground might be soggy.

What can you not drink with LifeStraw?

While the LifeStraw may remove all parasites and bacteria, it does nothing about salt. It cannot be used to make ocean water or other salt water drinkable, and since urine typically has a high salt level, it's going to be like drinking from a salt shaker. Also the LifeStraw does nothing about taste either.

Does the LifeStraw filter viruses?

LifeStraw Membrane Ultrafilters are capable of removing 99.999% (log 5) of viruses (including Rotavirus), 99.999999% (log 8) of bacteria (including E. coli and Salmonella), 99.999% (log 5) of parasites (Giardia and Cryptosporidium), and 99.999% (log 5) of microplastics.



How effective is the Lifestraw?... Lifestraw vs. muddy puddle




More answers regarding is LifeStraw a silver bullet water purification solution for travelling in India?

Answer 2

Thorsten has an excellent response re: the filtration failings of the lifestraw itself.

I would find sucking on the lifestraw for all drinking water tiring. When I visited rural China, I used a tiny, battery-operated UV based sterilization system. It would sterilize 500ml of water at a time, plenty for everyday use. I also used the water to wash my own utensils as I didn't always trust the utensils provided at rural restaurants. I even "nuked" the bottled water when I didn't trust that the bottle hadn't been refilled.

One thing to consider, for example: how are you going to rinse your mouth after you brush your teeth if you only had a lifestraw. Many tourists have unthinkingly used faucet water by mistake!

There's also the problem that water is not the only source of contamination. You need to be very careful about the type of food you eat and how it was prepared, stored, and served to you.


Note that UV and chlorine/iodine systems don't remove chemical contaminants. Many people use an activated carbon filter in conjunction. Still, a carbon filter and UV sterilizer can fit in a large nalgene water bottle and operate on batteries without ac power, which is more can be said for reverse osmosis systems.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Pineapple Supply Co., Gustavo Fring, Gustavo Fring, Shafi_fotumcatcher