The eco machine that can make water out of thin air

Ed Pilkington in New York
Guardian [UK], November 23 2008
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/nov/23/water-mill-eco-invention


http://tinyurl.com/6rg73x

[More info at the company, Element Four: http://www.elementfour.com/ ]


Water, Water, everywhere; nor any drop to drink. The plight of the
Ancient Mariner is about to be alleviated thanks to a firm of
eco-inventors from Canada who claim to have found the solution to the
world's worsening water shortages by drawing the liquid of life from
an unlimited and untapped source - the air.

The company, Element Four, has developed a machine that it hopes will
become the first mainstream household appliance to have been invented
since the microwave. Their creation, the WaterMill, uses the
electricity of about three light bulbs to condense moisture from the
air and purify it into clean drinking water.

The machine went on display this weekend in the Flatiron district of
Manhattan, hosted by Wired magazine at its annual showcase of the
latest gizmos its editors believe could change the world. From the
outside, the mill looks like a giant golf ball that has been chopped
in half: it is about 3ft in diameter, made of white plastic, and is
attached to the wall.

It works by drawing air through filters to remove dust and particles,
then cooling it to just below the temperature at which dew forms. The
condensed water is passed through a self-sterilising chamber that uses
microbe-busting UV light to eradicate any possibility of Legionnaires'
disease or other infections. Finally, it is filtered and passed
through a pipe to the owner's fridge or kitchen tap.

The obvious question to the proposition that household water demands
can be met by drawing it from the air is: are you crazy? To which the
machine's inventor and Element Four's founder, Jonathan Ritchey,
replies: 'Just wait and see. The demand for water is off the chart.
People are looking for freedom from water distribution systems that
are shaky and increasingly unreliable.'

For the environmentally conscious consumer, the WaterMill has an
obvious appeal. Bottled water is an ecological catastrophe. In the US
alone, about 30bn litres of bottled water is consumed every year at a
cost of about $11bn (£7.4bn).

According to the Earth Policy Institute, about 1.5m barrels of oil -
enough to power 100,000 cars for a year - is used just to make the
plastic. The process also uses twice as much water as fits inside the
container, not to mention the 30m bottles that go into landfills every
day in the US. But the mill also has downsides, not least its $1,200
cost when it goes on sale in America, the UK, Italy, Australia and
Japan in the spring. In these credit crunch times that might dissuade
many potential buyers, though Ritchey points out that at $0.3 per
litre, it is much cheaper than bottled water and would pay for itself
in a couple of years.

There is also the awkward fact that although there is eight times more
atmospheric water than in all the rivers of the world combined, it is
unevenly distributed. Those areas of the US that are most desperate
for more water - such as the arid south-west where ground water levels
are already dramatically depleted - have the lowest levels of moisture
in the air.

The mill ceases to be effective below about 30 per cent relative
humidity levels, which are common later in the day in states such as
Arizona. To combat that problem, the machine has an intelligent
computer built into it that increases its output at dawn when humidity
is highest, and reduces it from mid-afternoon when a blazing sun dries
the air.






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