Episode

Fungi-Filled Diapers: How Plastic-Eating Fungi May Change Child-Rearing

Podcast
Business for Good Podcast
Published
Oct 15, 2025
Duration seconds
2436
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://businessforgoodpodcast.libsyn.com/fungi-filled-diapers-how-plastic-eating-fungi-may-change-child-rearing
Audio
https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/businessforgoodpodcast/B4G_EP_176_Final.mp3?dest-id=761849
JSON
/v1/public/podcasts/business-for-good-podcast-641837/episodes/fungi-filled-diapers-how-plastic-eating-fungi-may-change-child-rearing
Markdown
/podcast/business-for-good-podcast-641837/fungi-filled-diapers-how-plastic-eating-fungi-may-change-child-rearing.md

Actions

  • POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/business-for-good-podcast-641837/episodes/fungi-filled-diapers-how-plastic-eating-fungi-may-change-child-rearing/transcription-requests
    Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode.
  • GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/business-for-good-podcast-641837/fungi-filled-diapers-how-plastic-eating-fungi-may-change-child-rearing.md
    Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource.

Summary

If you've ever changed a diaper, you might've wondered what happens to it after it goes in the trash. The answer, unfortunately, is that it'll sit in a landfill for hundreds of years—certainly longer than the baby who briefly wore it will live. In fact, every diaper you wore when you were a baby is still sitting around, at best in a landfill, or perhaps even in the ocean. And did you know the average American baby goes through 6,000 diapers before learning to use a toilet? But what if fungi could change that? In this episode, I sit down with serial entrepreneur Miki Agrawal, the founder of Thinx (yes, the period underwear company), Tushy (yes, the bidet company), and now HIRO Technologies —a company using plastic-eating fungi to help disposable diapers return to the earth. Miki, who some have dubbed the "Queen of pee, poop, and periods," (I think they should shorten it to the "Queen of Secretions") shares how an opportune moment with her toddler and a children's book about fungi inspired her to launch HIRO. Her company's first product— HIRO Diapers —uses a packet of dormant, culinary-grade fungi that awaken when exposed to moisture and begin breaking down the diaper's plastic components, dramatically reducing its landfill lifespan from centuries to under a year, after which it simply becomes dirt. We talk about everything from the science of fungal degradation to the challenges of biotech entrepreneurship, from raising millions for an unconventional idea to why she believes reconnecting with nature is the ultimate form of innovation. Whether you're a parent, a sustainability enthusiast, or just fascinated by the intersection of biology and business, this conversation will make you rethink what "waste" really means. Discussed in this episode It was the children's book P…