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Using condensation to gather drinking water in Ethiopia
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:08 pm
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:08 pm
OT scientists, if there were thousands of these scattered over Ethiopia acting as a massive dehumidifier, would it change the climate?
LINK
LINK
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:09 pm to Teufelhunden
Isn't this what Uncle Owen and Aunt Larue did?
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:09 pm to Teufelhunden
quote:
His stunning water towers stand nearly 30 feet tall and can collect over 25 gallons of potable water per day by harvesting atmospheric water vapor.
Interesting...
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:13 pm to Teufelhunden
I'm trying to understand, what is going to make water condense out of the atmosphere? Condensation usually forms on a surface colder than atmospheric temperature (like on a cold beverage).
This post was edited on 4/3/14 at 1:14 pm
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:20 pm to Jack Bauers HnK
I think it's just a high surface area structure that is collecting natural dew formation from the day/night cycle.
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:23 pm to LSUballs
Q: How does every Ethiopian joke start?
A: By looking over your shoulder.
A: By looking over your shoulder.
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:29 pm to Teufelhunden
quote:
OT scientists, if there were thousands of these scattered over Ethiopia acting as a massive dehumidifier, would it change the climate?
The real question is, would it change the Ethiopians? The answer is no, it wouldn't. While society in general has advanced beyond a primitive lifestyle, equatorial Africa as a whole lags far behind the rest of the world.
There's something culturally which prevents them from advancing, no matter now much money and resources is thrown at the problem.
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:40 pm to Teufelhunden
quote:You're probably asking whether it would change the local ecosystem, not the "climate" which would be a larger-scale regional (or global) scope.
would it change the climate?
Resources are finite. To answer the question of whether these structures would change the ecosystem, ask the question "Would having these structures scattered over Ethiopia lower ambient water vapor in the atmosphere to the point that there is a shortage of water vapor at another point where it is needed?"
You could get away with structures like that in places with high humidity and probably not change the ecosystem, but in an arid or semi-arid environment you may be creating artificial shortages that effect something in that ecosystem.
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:43 pm to justlookin
quote:
The real question is, would it change the Ethiopians? The answer is no, it wouldn't. While society in general has advanced beyond a primitive lifestyle, equatorial Africa as a whole lags far behind the rest of the world.
There's something culturally which prevents them from advancing, no matter now much money and resources is thrown at the problem.
Are you fricking serious with this?
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:47 pm to Teufelhunden
I've wondered this about windmills.
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:49 pm to OysterPoBoy
quote:
I've wondered this about windmills.
They use up a lot of wind energy... where there are big wind farms they have seen a significant reduction in dust devils and tornadoes. Eventually they might even be able to stop hurricanes.
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:52 pm to Teufelhunden
Definitely not using reverse osmosis, you need a cooled condenser for that. Probably simply catching nightly condensed air on surface area and funneling to bottom. 25 gallons a day seems like baloney to me though.
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:52 pm to Teufelhunden
serious question...wouldn't one of these need to be in an area with relatively high humidity to work and not in, let's say, a desert?
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:56 pm to JermStone
There's humidity in the night air in coastal desert areas, which can travel inland quite a bit.
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:57 pm to CrazyTigerFan
quote:
There's humidity in the night air in coastal desert areas, which can travel inland quite a bit.
well there ya go.
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:57 pm to JermStone
The most humid cities on earth are generally located closer to the equator.
Posted on 4/3/14 at 1:58 pm to justlookin
quote:
The real question is, would it change the Ethiopians? The answer is no, it wouldn't. While society in general has advanced beyond a primitive lifestyle, equatorial Africa as a whole lags far behind the rest of the world.
There's something culturally which prevents them from advancing, no matter now much money and resources is thrown at the problem.
It occurred to me that there wouldn't be world hunger if you people LIVED WHERE THE FOOD IS
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