Comment on Penn Engineers Discover a New Class of Materials That Passively Harvest Water from Air
FMT99@lemmy.world 10 months agoYeah now we can industrially extract all the remaining water from the air as well as the ground.
Comment on Penn Engineers Discover a New Class of Materials That Passively Harvest Water from Air
FMT99@lemmy.world 10 months agoYeah now we can industrially extract all the remaining water from the air as well as the ground.
Jimbabwe@lemmy.world 10 months ago
You realize the amount of water is constant, right?
match@pawb.social 10 months ago
Not if Nestle has anything to say about it
shalafi@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Water is created and destroyed by biological and other natural processes. Here go photosynthesis:
6CO₂ + 6H₂O + Light → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂
homesweethomeMrL@lemmy.world 10 months ago
We prefer the term “recycled dinosaur pee”.
spankmonkey@lemmy.world 10 months ago
I am fairly certain they are referring to the fact that we are already removing water from the fresh water cycle, and this could remove even more. For example, global warming combined with draining the aquafers means less water in the cycle as it was drained into the ocean and isn’t beaing replenished as snow/glaicers.
Yes, the total volume of water on the planet isn’t being changed by that shift, but the amount of freshwater is.
Eheran@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Nobody will remove water from ambient air in relevant amounts. Roughly 0.5 % of air is water vapor, a total of something like 10’000 km³ liquid water. This is replaced (residence time) about once every 10 days, so roughly 1’000 km³ daily.
Say we extract 10 km³ (10’000’000 m³) daily, enough for roughly 10 million people (including all industry, zero recycling of the water etc.). By that time you deal with 1 % of earths atmosphere every day. May I remind everyone how absurdly costly in any conceivable way that would be? You would rather lay a few pipes and purify sea water at a tiny(!) fraction of the cost.
spankmonkey@lemmy.world 10 months ago
They won’t drain the aquifers, nature will replace that much water!
They won’t cut down all the forests, the trees will just regrow!
They don’t have to cycle the entire atmosphere to cause havoc. Pulling the moisture out in local areas that already have lost aquifers and ice in the mountains is the obvious issue. Plus, you don’t know the cost in the long run, it could end up being fairly cheap.
aesthelete@lemmy.world 10 months ago
They do have a point about groundwater though.
baldingpudenda@lemmy.world 10 months ago
FMT99 missed the week they taught the water cycle.
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