News

The Plantaform Smart Indoor Garden uniquely uses fog to grow fresh veggies from seedling to harvest in just a month. I had a bounty in just 30 days.
Jacob Murungi collects water near his home in central Kenya — harvesting it from fog that forms overnight and clings to trees. LAARE, Kenya – Jacob Murungi and his wife don't sleep much.
These water collecting plants, like rain chains, capture water, drain to the ground, then drink at the roots, transpire, then keep their environments cool and moist. A cycle.
While fog and wind may not be high on many wish lists when it comes to an ideal weather scenario, such conditions are being utilised to encourage reforestation. A ground-breaking project is underway ...
Most of us take it for granted that water is as close as your kitchen tap. But that’s not true everywhere. Two scientists at MIT have a new method for harvesting water from fog, especially fo… ...
She says the water from the trees covers all their household needs – cleaning, cooking, bathing, water for the animals and drinking (after they boil it). Asked who taught them to harvest the fog ...
Water molecules jump into the air from lakes, rivers, oceans and plants, evaporating (turning to invisible vapor) like water left in the bottom of a glass, which mysteriously disappears overnight ...
Fog nets have been in use since the 1980s and can yield clean water in any area that experiences frequent, moving fog. As wind moves the fog's microscopic water droplets through the nets, some get ...
Fog nets have long been used in arid areas to collect drinking water, but a new “harp” design could be three times more efficient.
Fog harvesting has long been a method of collecting water around the world. As climate change makes water harder and harder to find, technology is making it easier to pull water from the air.
Fog nets have long been used in arid areas to collect drinking water, but a new “harp” design could be three times more efficient.