Capturing water from fog - on a large scale - could provide some of the driest cities in the world with drinking water. This ...
Scientists estimate fog nets could collect up to 10 liters of water per square meter daily during peak months.
A field study spanning a year showed that water collected from fog could ease water scarcity affecting vulnerable populations ...
Fog harvesting may provide a crucial water source for people living in some of the planet’s driest regions. By capturing ...
Researchers may have just found a way to establish a renewable water resource in one of the driest places in the world. Using ...
Fog harvesting is a relatively simple process. Mesh panels are hung between poles, and as moisture-laden clouds pass through ...
Researchers in Chile are using fog-harvesting tech to turn air moisture into water, offering a game-changing solution for ...
Now, local researchers have assessed if "fog harvesting," a method where fog water is collected and saved, is a feasible way to provide the residents of informal settlements with much needed water.
Researchers in Chile have been looking into fog harvesting to see if it could help provide local people with much needed water.
SOUTH-EAST ASIA (dpa): Harvesting fog could ease water scarcity in the world's driest place, a new study has suggested. In ...
This what researchers in Chile have concluded after studying the potential of fog harvesting in the desert city of Alto Hospicio in the north of the country. Average rainfall in the region is less ...
This week's Short Wave news roundup covers harvesting drinking water from fog, what elephant seals reveal about fish populations in the deep ocean, and why there's always room for dessert.