September 05, 2008

Cloud Harvest

Fog collectors net water for mountaintop villagers

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CLOUD HARVEST
Fog Collectors net water for mountaintop villagers

BLUE GOLD
The fight for Canada's water has only begun

GO WITH THE FLOW
The art and science of moving water

WATER FACTS
In the small Sherpa community of Kalpokhari, in the foothills of Nepalís Himalayas, residents collect fog. A 6-by-12-meter structure resembling a large volleyball net traps water from the thick mountain fog and channels it into storage tanks, which deliver water to residents through an outdoor tap.

The collector is part of a pilot project involving several Canadian organizations, including a four-member team from the Nepal Community Development Foundation. It has consistently produced an astonishing volume of waterññmore than 500 liters a day.

Throughout the developing world, contaminated water is a key contributor to generally poor health. Although Nepal is rich in natural freshwater resources, it is mountainous, with small communities nestled into ridges and crests far above streams, rivers, or wells, and often far from drivable roads. Because traditional water-collection methods involve hours of walking each day, securing access to clean, safe drinking water has always been a formidable challenge.

'The first collector will be the seed for new ventures in many other Asian countries,' says Rick Taylor, a member of the Toronto-based Nepal Water from Fog Committee. 'It is a necessary and viable alternative water-harvesting method.'

First tested in Chile, fog collectors are now operating in Ecuador, Mexico, and Oman. In an arid part of Peru, 20 large fog collectors produce enough water to keep a 450,000-liter reservoir full, year-round.

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