The future of fog

If water does not fall from the sky, scoop it out of the air, at least in areas where dew and fog occur regularly and other water resources are scarce. There are several small fog collecting programmes in countries such as the Dominican Republic, South Africa, Nepal and Peru. Collectors are often ma...

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Main Author: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/46925
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99591
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spelling ftcgiar:oai:cgspace.cgiar.org:10568/46925 2023-07-30T04:05:03+02:00 The future of fog Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation 2014-10-16T09:07:50Z https://hdl.handle.net/10568/46925 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99591 en eng Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation Spore CTA. 2000. The future of fog. Spore 89. CTA, Wageningen, The Netherlands. 1011-0054 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/46925 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99591 Open Access Spore News Item 2014 ftcgiar 2023-07-12T20:26:51Z If water does not fall from the sky, scoop it out of the air, at least in areas where dew and fog occur regularly and other water resources are scarce. There are several small fog collecting programmes in countries such as the Dominican Republic, South Africa, Nepal and Peru. Collectors are often made of large, vertically positioned sheets of cloth or other fine-meshed material. The largest project to date, in the arid coastal desert of northern Chile, has provided an average of 11,000 l of water per day to a village of 330 people. In the Cape Verde Islands, António Advino Sabino is an enthusiastic advocate of fog harvesting amongst the farmers living in mountain areas who are increasingly aware of the importance of fog collection to supply water for domestic use or watering animals. Four collectors were installed in Santo Antão in the community of Corda at 1200 metres altitude. Sabino has designed various tailor- made fog collectors in combination with sand-filters. Previous collectors used window-screens; in the future, these will be replaced with polypropylene Raschel mesh to enable better efficiency and drainage. The Meteorological Service of Canada is an important crossroads in the world of fog research, programmes and information dissemination. Their website: www.msc-smc.ec.gc.ca/armp/ offers a lot of information and they publish the Fog newsletter. They are also the driving force behind the Second International Conference on Fog and Fog Collection, to be held from 15 to 20 July 2001 in St. John s, Newfoundland, Canada, with the theme of Potential Applications of Fog Water Collection. One part of the programme will focus on the role of fog in water planning for developing countries, results of operational fog collection projects, and fog dissipation . To know more: Fog newsletter & conference Robert Schemenauer, PO Box 81541 Toronto, Ontario Canada M2R 2X1 Fax: 1 416 739 4211 Email: Robert.Schemenauer@ec.gc.ca António Advino Sabino C.P. 534 - Praia Republic of Cape Verde Fax: +238 624 178 Email: ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Newfoundland CGIAR CGSpace (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection CGIAR CGSpace (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research)
op_collection_id ftcgiar
language English
description If water does not fall from the sky, scoop it out of the air, at least in areas where dew and fog occur regularly and other water resources are scarce. There are several small fog collecting programmes in countries such as the Dominican Republic, South Africa, Nepal and Peru. Collectors are often made of large, vertically positioned sheets of cloth or other fine-meshed material. The largest project to date, in the arid coastal desert of northern Chile, has provided an average of 11,000 l of water per day to a village of 330 people. In the Cape Verde Islands, António Advino Sabino is an enthusiastic advocate of fog harvesting amongst the farmers living in mountain areas who are increasingly aware of the importance of fog collection to supply water for domestic use or watering animals. Four collectors were installed in Santo Antão in the community of Corda at 1200 metres altitude. Sabino has designed various tailor- made fog collectors in combination with sand-filters. Previous collectors used window-screens; in the future, these will be replaced with polypropylene Raschel mesh to enable better efficiency and drainage. The Meteorological Service of Canada is an important crossroads in the world of fog research, programmes and information dissemination. Their website: www.msc-smc.ec.gc.ca/armp/ offers a lot of information and they publish the Fog newsletter. They are also the driving force behind the Second International Conference on Fog and Fog Collection, to be held from 15 to 20 July 2001 in St. John s, Newfoundland, Canada, with the theme of Potential Applications of Fog Water Collection. One part of the programme will focus on the role of fog in water planning for developing countries, results of operational fog collection projects, and fog dissipation . To know more: Fog newsletter & conference Robert Schemenauer, PO Box 81541 Toronto, Ontario Canada M2R 2X1 Fax: 1 416 739 4211 Email: Robert.Schemenauer@ec.gc.ca António Advino Sabino C.P. 534 - Praia Republic of Cape Verde Fax: +238 624 178 Email: ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
spellingShingle Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
The future of fog
author_facet Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
author_sort Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
title The future of fog
title_short The future of fog
title_full The future of fog
title_fullStr The future of fog
title_full_unstemmed The future of fog
title_sort future of fog
publisher Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
publishDate 2014
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/46925
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99591
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_source Spore
op_relation Spore
CTA. 2000. The future of fog. Spore 89. CTA, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
1011-0054
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/46925
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/99591
op_rights Open Access
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