PH Genius on Display: 5 Homegrown Innovations Shine Abroad
From a diagnostic device the size of a coffee mug to a wound-healing machine built out of an aquarium pump, Filipino inventors proved on one of the world’s biggest tech stages that world-class innovation doesn’t need a world-class budget.
The Philippines brought a strategically curated lineup of homegrown technologies spanning the HealthTech, Climate and Sustainability, and AI tracks to London Tech Week (LTW) 2026, one of the largest tech shows on the planet, where thousands of innovators, startups, and industry leaders converged from June 8-10 at Olympia, London.

Here are five standout Filipino innovations that turned heads at this year’s showcase.
HealthTech Standouts Tackle Diagnostics and Wound Care
Leading the charge was “Lab-in-a-Mug,” a portable point-of-care molecular diagnostic system developed by The Manila HealthTek Inc. The Lab-in-a-Mug (LiaM) 3.0 uses Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification (LAMP) technology to rapidly detect vector-borne viruses and other infectious diseases. Compact enough to resemble an ordinary mug, the device lets health workers run tests directly in clinics, rural health units, and field settings, cutting reliance on centralized labs and slashing delays tied to sample transport — a game-changer for remote and underserved communities.
Just as inventive is “AquaVac,” a negative pressure wound therapy system from AYO Tech Corp designed for patients battling chronic diabetic ulcers, pressure sores, and complex traumatic wounds. Its standout innovation lies in its simplicity: Developers repurposed a standard aquarium pump as the vacuum source that powers the wound-healing process. Despite its unconventional origins, AquaVac has been clinically tested and validated through rigorous medical research.

Climate, Construction, and AI Innovations Round Out the Lineup
On the sustainability front, “Po-Lite Hollow Blocks” from Po-Lite Technology Inc. are redefining construction materials. These lightweight, load-bearing blocks are built from high-strength bio-composite shells using organic fillers and indigenous Philippine resins, making them notably stronger and tougher than conventional hollow blocks. They’re also fully customizable, giving users the flexibility to choose colors, surface designs, and graphic art features.
Also representing the climate space is the “LITHOS Climate Nanotech Suite,” created by LITHOS Manufacturing. This portfolio of mineral nanotechnology solutions includes Pre-Conditioned Zeolites, the Rainfold Foldable Tank, the Zeramic Filter, and Copper-Modified Natural Zeolite — technologies that collectively help preserve food, purify water, improve air quality, protect crops, and even convert methane into clean energy.

Rounding out the showcase is “PathBuilder,” an AI-native learning intelligence platform designed and programmed by Makarius Smart Learning. The adaptive platform diagnoses learning gaps, personalizes mastery pathways, and verifies real outcomes for students, while also helping teachers manage administrative tasks so they can focus on tailoring instruction to each learner’s needs.
All five participating startups are beneficiaries of the Department of Science and Technology’s (DOST) commercialization and pre-commercialization assistance programs. The Philippine showcase at LTW 2026 was organized through the SPICE Program of the DOST-Technology Application and Promotion Institute, under the broader PhilippiNOW campaign.

By putting these innovations in front of a global audience at platforms like LTW 2026, DOST continues to open doors for Filipino innovators to break into international markets, build strategic partnerships, and prove that world-class solutions can, and do, come from the Philippines.
Filipinos looking to support these innovators can join the PhilippiNOW movement and help champion homegrown talent as it reaches new markets worldwide.
