This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

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Ismail87
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This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by Ismail87 »

The United Nations estimates that people in Sub-Saharan Africa spend roughly 40 billion hours per year collecting water, and what they do find is often unsafe to drink. In some parts of Africa, finding potable water can be a six-hour endeavor. Roughly 3.4 million people die every year from water-related disease. The water shortage is a major life-threatening problem that affects as many as 1 billion people in Africa alone, but it's not as though you can just snap your fingers and make water magically appear out of thin air.

Or can you? Designed by Arturo Vittori, an industrial designer, and his colleague Andreas Vogler, WarkaWater is an inexpensive, easily-assembled structure that extracts gallons of fresh water from the air. Standing 30 feet tall, the vase-shaped tower is made of lightweight juncus stalks carefully woven together that stand strong in wind gusts while still allowing air to pass through. This rigid housing holds up a nylon or polypropylene mesh net that collects droplets of dew as they form on the surface. As cold air condenses, the droplets roll down and collect in a container at the bottom, making fresh, safe water appear out of thin air.

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Others have developed similar ideas in the past (including fog-collecting water machine out of MIT a few years ago), but the WarkaWater yields more water for less money. According to the designer, the tower can generate more than 25 gallons of water a day, and because the process is enabled by radically changing day and night temperatures, it's especially effective in the desert, where fresh water can be hardest to find.

"[In Ethiopia], public infrastructures do not exist and building [something like] a well is not easy," Vittori told Smithsonian. "To find water, you need to drill in the ground very deep, often as much as 1,600 feet. So it's technically difficult and expensive. Moreover, pumps need electricity to run as well as access to spare parts in case the pump breaks down."

This could actually work: The WarkaWater, on the other hand, is relatively inexpensive to set up and requires little maintenance. Currently, each tower costs $500 to set up, but that would drop if the towers found an interested investor and were mass-produced. Even now though, that's a low price compared to something like the $2,200 Bill Gates toilet, which requires more maintenance and requires completing a complex procedure to set-up.

By the end of the year, Vittori hopes to have two towers fully operational in Ethiopia, where only 21% of the population has access to "adequate sanitation services."

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"It's not just illnesses that we're trying to address. Many Ethiopian children from rural villages spend several hours every day to fetch water, time they could invest for more productive activities and education," Vittori said. "If we can give people something that lets them be more independent, they can free themselves from this cycle."

Global water scarcity: According to the UN, "1.2 billion people, or almost one-fifth of the world's population, live in areas of physical scarcity, and 500 million people are approaching this situation." While a number of organizations and initiatives already exist, water scarcity remains a gargantuan problem across the world, especially in places like Sub-Saharan Africa and parts of India.

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Source: http://www.policymic.com/articles/90285 ... ign=social

Simple, cheap and efficient. This could be a good investment back home :ehh:
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by AgentOfChaos »

That's unbelievably cool. :gladbron:
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by Octavius »

Would these towers work on beached... would they capture seawater and make it drinkable... that would be amazing.

I wonder what the impact would be on the immediate environment... will it make the air in the immediate environment devoid of water? If so how would that in turn impact the flora and fauna of the place.
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by LiquidHYDROGEN »

Pointless endeavour. Africa has the largest underground water reserves. These mudhut villages shouldn't exist. People should be living in towns with water wells and cisterns. Capturing moisture is to unreliable and also doesn't make sense in long-term settlements.
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by knowthyself »

So when does this guy get his Nobel?

Arturo Vittori will be the rain god of Ethiopia. Makes better sense to pray to him than fake African deities.
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by Octavius »

I'm surprised though that the Ethiopians with all their rivers and lakes + the large amounts of rain they receive, still need help to get water. :snoop:

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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by Grant »

25-30 gallons of water per tower per day. No drilling and no continuing power requirements. Requires no additional infrastructure. It's simple water condensation that happens day/night everywhere, but is most extreme in a desert environment, where the towers work best. They should work well in the coastal breezes if the towers are placed inland of where they will catch salt mist, which would not be purified.

Imagine the difference a few tens of thousands of these could make in Miyi in the next inevitable drought. :up: It looks to me like you could even put some version of that on a camel.

I still say that some bright young man will one day combine water and feed storage to turn the next drought into a personal bonanza. Buy low, sell high for breeding stock after the next big Gu. :lol:

:arrow: :?:

Doesn't a camel drink about 20-25 gallons at a go?
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by original dervish »

These technologies are built on the premise that Africans will never develop/industrialize .
I have a better solution....tell the IMF/World bank to do one, and follow a path of independent development.
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by LiquidHYDROGEN »

original dervish wrote:These technologies are built on the premise that Africans will never develop/industrialize .
I have a better solution....tell the IMF/World bank to do one, and follow a path of independent development.
Exactly.
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by original dervish »

They want to busy us with scratching a living from a land that delivers them billions annually...for over a century. :pacspit:
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by Commerce »

This invention is borderline-insulting and quite frank a method to further keep the black race dependent. In actuality I would state that its very useful in many semi-scarce regions but not only limited to Africa.
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by Grant »

OD and LH,

Do you support a spigot behind every bush in miyi, or do you plan to move everybody to the cities and dispose of the livestock? This technology has it's place, including in the American Southwest and any other arid climate where advanced infrastructure and large populations do not reach.

You know what is in my mind at this moment? It's the bundle of plows rusting away on the cliff at Eyl, and the water from the entire Nugaal drainage going over the edge. Such a waste. Are you going to wait for them to milk camels like Holsteins at long lines of machines, or are you going to start where the industry is today?

A source of clean water where it is limited is always a blessing!
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by original dervish »

Rain water harvesting systems is what we need.......not some "back of a cigarette pack" design.
Strange how NGO types always push stone age technology...from the comfort of five star hotels. :?
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by LiquidHYDROGEN »

Lifestock should be kept in fertile areas. Also camels hate places with no trees because Somalia is so windy. Water pumps and condensation-catchers might be useful in small villages and mudhuts but are useless to anybody else except nomads. Proper infrastructure like piping and plumbing, huge reservoirs, solar-powered desalination plants are needed not shit little micro-projdcts designed to keep the dumb african economically subservient.
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Re: This Weird Tower Could Save Millions of Lives Every Year

Post by Basra- »

30 feet long?? The tower is too gigantic. Is it really efficient? I guess, the invention is in its infancy. U know, how technology goes-- one awkward big thing--and then later it shrinks as inventers become smarter. Remember old big PC back in 2000s? OR BIG OL TVS? don't u love flat tvs? The Big ol cell phones?

I think---poverty and worlds problems can be irradiated in a heart beat, if only Humans came together. If only humans cared. Everything is right before our eyes, we just have to see it for ourselves. :eat: God has given us the tools, the natural resources, even including atmosphere and climate which is used here to de-vaporize water. Imagine a world of no poverty, where bio seeds are engineered and people grow in their wheat, fruits and vegetables in their backyard. Or Burgers and Solid good food are sized up in small pop corns, and u pop it in a microwave where burger grows instantly into deliciousness. :stylin:
Last edited by Basra- on Mon Jun 02, 2014 6:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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