Dr Ahmad Sabirin Arshad’s Post

View profile for Dr Ahmad Sabirin Arshad

Group Chief Executive Officer @ Boustead Holdings Berhad , 100M Impressions, Favikon Top 50 Content Creators 2025; Top 100 CEOs to Follow on LinkedIn 2024; Top 10 CEOs to Follow on LinkedIn 2023, 2022

Japan just built a robot fish that swims through sewage and cleans microplastics as it goes It sounds like science fiction — but Japan has engineered a robotic fish that swims through dirty water, finds plastic, and eats it. Called GuppyX, this soft-bodied robot is inspired by the shape and movement of real fish, but its mouth is a mini-filtration system that extracts microplastics from polluted waterways. The robot was developed by engineers at the University of Tokyo using a biohybrid silicone skeleton and AI-controlled fins. GuppyX mimics the subtle movements of real fish so precisely that it doesn’t scare off wildlife. As it glides through water, a suction mechanism pulls in fluid, filtering out particles down to 5 microns. Each fish can operate autonomously for 6 hours, using sonar to avoid obstacles and GPS to follow mapped river paths. They're fully waterproof, wireless, and can be deployed in groups to sweep entire lakes or canals. And because they look and move like fish, they're far less disruptive to aquatic ecosystems. What’s more incredible is how the robots self-dock for recharging. After each sweep, they return to a floating solar-powered dock where they offload microplastics and prep for the next cycle. In one pilot trial, three GuppyX units filtered over 3.2 kilograms of microplastics from Tokyo’s Tama River in 10 hours. This is one of the first large-scale attempts to combine robotic swarms with environmental remediation. Japan plans to deploy these fleets into urban rivers nationwide by 2026. — in New York, NY, United States.

  • No alternative text description for this image
Mradul Jain

Recruitment Lead at Mindlance

2mo

Being a doctor comes with the responsibility of sharing credible information — especially on a platform like LinkedIn. Posting unverified or fake content like this only adds to misinformation. LinkedIn is not WhatsApp University. Please take a moment to fact-check before sharing. Misinformation spreads fast, and many people, especially in today's time, tend to believe what they see without question.

  • No alternative text description for this image
Anatolii Timoshuk

Grafana Labs @ Solutions Engineer @ Berlin

2mo

And the image is AI, so no one knows how it looks, right 🫠

Thomas Flock

Principal AI Architect - Data Science • Data & AI - Data Science - 3Cloud

2mo
Veronica Araujo

Digital Writer/Content Creator- American Red Cross

2mo

We need this more than we need AI

David Ako-Bryant

Business Intelligence Engineer | Power BI Architect | Data Analyst

2mo

Click bait - this is not even confirmed to be an actual working model.

Hriday Agrawal

SDE-1 at Pathlock | Grand Finalist-Bajaj Ohm Challenge’24 | GDSC Lead’22 | Electrical Engg Grad @PEC’24

2mo

It looks great, but won't it disrupt the food chain of that ecosystem? Somehow, they might end up in the stomach of a larger fish.  Are they made with the materials which are digestible in case these robots are ingested by other species?

Sonja Breuer

Wellbeing Economist MSc. BSc. PDC

2mo

Treating the symptoms is fine when treating the root cause at the same time. Otherwise it’s a never ending cycle…

Alvaro Castillo

Full Stack Development | Database Management | Web Development | Scrum Master

2mo

yet the picture is AI

Pointless ! Drop in the ocean ( excuse the pun) you’d need billions of them to make any difference

See more comments

To view or add a comment, sign in

Explore content categories