Harvesting Water From Thin Air

A new generation of environmental designers are working to grab water out of thin air

In the era of climate change, the world's dry places are expected to get even drier. Lack of clean water could render some regions virtually uninhabitable. A new generation of environmental designers are working to avert such a disaster by grabbing water out of thin air. They aren't magicians--they're just adapting methods that desert creatures have used for millions of years

By Richard Schiffman

October 6, 2014

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Harvesting Water from the air

Though southern Africa's Namib Desert is lucky to get a half inch of rain a year, STENOCARA, THE NAMIB BEETLE, finds more than enough to drink. When fog rolls in off the Atlantic, it raises its rear to the breeze and waits for water to condense on its hydrophilic (water-attracting) shell. The drops roll down a network of waxy, hydrophobic (water-repelling) troughs straight into the insect's mouth. Engineers are coming up with systems that mimic the beetle's to harvest water from the atmosphere in arid regions.

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Harvesting Water from the air

The WARKA WATER TOWER is named for the fig tree that serves as a gathering place in many rural African communities. A bamboo frame encloses hydrophilic polypropylene mesh, which funnels fog droplets into a cistern at its base. One tower can produce 25 gallons of clean drinking water a day. It has no moving parts, requires no electricity to operate, and can be assembled largely from local materials. 

This low-tech structure is the handiwork of Italian designer Arturo Vittori, who helped develop manned spacecraft for the European Space Agency. Designing space habitats, where efficient use of resources is critical, caused him to think freshly about similar challenges on Earth, he says. Vittori is raising funds to bring his water towers to rural Ethiopia next year. 

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Harvesting Water from the air

Chile's bone-dry Atacama Desert is attracting an even simpler water-harvesting device. A team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology employs coated stainless steel grids as FOG CATCHERS. It envisions them clustering like turbines on wind farms, producing water for agriculture.