Reactor Podcast
These giant meshes turn fog into drinking water—no pumps, no power. It’s CloudFisher, a system developed by the German NGO WasserStiftung that captures airborne moisture with technical plastic nets stretched into the wind. How it works Zero energy: wind + fog, no electricity required Durable & recyclable: engineered to resist winds up to 120 km/h Potable by design: collected water is filtered to WHO standards, then routed to public fountains or cisterns Why it matters In Morocco’s Anti-Atlas, a 1,674 m² installation produces ~36,800 L/day for 1,300 people across 5 villages Each m² of net can harvest up to 22 L/day in foggy conditions It taps the sky—not aquifers—so it doesn’t disrupt local water cycles Old wisdom, modern scale Inspired by centuries-old Andean and Amazigh practices of dew and fog collection—now upgraded with modern materials and deployment at community scale. Already active in 5+ countries. If you’re building in climate & water: What would it take to pilot this in your region? Could schools, clinics, or shelters be first beneficiaries? Pairing with storage, UV, or remote monitoring—who’s in? 🎥 Credit: EcoMedy for the field footage. 🔔 Subscribe to Reactor for more deeptech that drives real-world sustainability. 💬 Comment where you’d deploy CloudFisher next, and tag a partner we should talk to. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2352682/support]
41 episodios
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