By Benson Rioba
ILMASIN, Kenya - With a
thirsty and impatient boy waiting nearby, Joseph Kipalian draws water from a
tank and pours it into the boy's bucket. The schoolyard water tank is fed from
an unusual source: the air.
Ilmasin primary school,
in the Ngong hills south of Nairobi, is outfitted with fog collectors,
contraptions of huge metal and wooden poles that hold mesh-patterned nets.
These trap fog droplets, which trickle into holding tanks.
The project, set up by
the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, aims to test the
viability of harvesting fog to help provide a safe and reliable source of water
in water-scarce areas. But the results have been mixed, not least because
keeping the collectors up and working has proved a challenge.
Fog net at Ilmasin Primary School, Nairobi, Kenya. TRF/ Benson Rioba |
Bancy Mati, a soil and
water engineering professor at the university, says fog collection is one of
the cheapest and most environmentally friendly ways of collecting clean water.
She launched the Kenya collector
after a similar project, set up by a German nongovernmental organisation, ran
successfully in Tanzania.
The region around the Ngong hills is a great place to
collect water, she said, since it sees fog both in the early morning and
throughout the night.
The region is semi-arid
and has perpetual problems with water shortages, she said.
Fog collectors, if built
at scale, could help unlock the economic potential of dry but fertile areas
like Ilmasin by providing water for irrigation and livestock as well as for
families, Mati said.
She hopes the collectors
could be used in a range of places across Kenya, particularly Marsabit County
in northern Kenya, another semi-arid region with plenty of fog.
Read the full story at Building Resilience and Adaptation to Climate Extremes and Disasters (BRACED).
Read the full story at Building Resilience and Adaptation to Climate Extremes and Disasters (BRACED).
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