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Fog harvesting could provide water for the driest cities

Fog harvesting could provide water for the driest cities

Victoria Gill

Science correspondent, BBC News

Getty Images An aerial image showing a dense collection of homes and a dirt playing field in the Flor de Poblacion encampment in Alto Hospicio, Chile. The ground looks dry and dusty and there are barren mountains in the background  Getty Images

Aerial image of an encampment in Alto Hospicio, Chile

Capturing water from fog – on a large scale – could provide some of the driest cities in the world with drinking water.

This is 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 than 0.19in (5mm) per year.

“Like a lot of cities, Alto Hospicio has its social problems,” said lead researcher Dr Virginia Carter Gamberini, from Universidad Mayor. “There is a lot of poverty”, she explained, and many people there have no direct access to the networks that supply clean water.

Many who live in the city’s poorest communities rely on drinking water that is delivered by truck.

However, clouds of fog that regularly gather over the mountain city are an untapped source, researchers say.

Maria Virginia Carter Gamberini An experimental fog harvesting system - consisting of two sheets of fine mesh nets, each suspended between two poles. The nets sit on a barren hill in the mistMaria Virginia Carter Gamberini

Fog harvesting systems consist of a fine mesh, through which the moisture-laden clouds pass

How do you harvest fog?

Capturing fog water is remarkably simple – a mesh is hung between poles, and when the moisture-laden clouds pass through that fine mesh, droplets form. The water is then channelled into pipes and storage tanks.

It has been used at a small scale for several decades, mainly in rural South and Central America – in places with the right foggy conditions. One of the biggest fog water harvesting systems is in Morocco, on the edge of the Sahara Desert.

However, Dr Carter says a “new era” of much larger-scale fog harvesting could provide a more secure and sustainable supply of water in urban environments where it is most needed.

Maria Virginia Carter Gamberini The image shows a slum, or informal settlement of shacks, in the Chilean city of Alto Hospico. There is a dense collection of low level buildings in an arid environment with desert mountains in the backgroundMaria Virginia Carter Gamberini

Alto Hospicio is in one of the world’s driest regions, and some of the poorest areas of the growing city have no secure water supply

She and her colleagues carried out assessments of how much water can be produced by fog harvesting, and combined that information with studies of cloud formation in satellite images and with weather forecasts.

From this, they concluded that the clouds that regularly form over the Pacific – and are blown across the coastal mountain city – could provide the people of Alto Hospicio’s slums with a sustainable source of drinking water. They published their findings in a paper in the journal Frontiers of Environmental Science.

Alto Hospicio’s fog forms over the Pacific Ocean – when warm, moist air flows over cold water – and is then…

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