Geographies in Depth

This Kenyan school is making water from thin air

A plastic container is filled with water from a tap in Kawangware district of Nairobi, Kenya April 18, 2018. Picture taken April 18, 2018. REUTERS/Njeri Mwangi - RC1B801B2080

The girls no longer have to travel many kilometres in search of water. Image: REUTERS/Njeri Mwangi

Benson Rioba
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Water

In this arid part of northern Kenya, water can be hard to find, particularly in the dry season.

But a centre run by the Samburu Girls Foundation - which rescues girls facing early marriage and female genital mutilation - has a new high-tech source of it.

Since June, the centre, which has rescued more than 1,200 girls, has used panels that catch water vapour in the air and condense it to supply their drinking water.

"We used to have difficulties in accessing water and during a drought we could either go to the river to fetch water or ask our neighbors to give us water," said Jecinta Lerle, a pupil and vice president of students at the centre's school.

But now, officials at the school say, the girls no longer have to travel for water - including into communities they have left, which could put them at risk.

"The girls can now have more time to study since there is enough fresh water to go round and there is no need to walk long distances to search for water," said Lotan Salapei, the foundation's head of partnerships.

 A girl at the Samburu Girls Foundation centre in Loosuk, Kenya, drinks from a fountain that draws its water from solar-powered panels that condense water vapour from the air, August, 11, 2018.
A girl at the Samburu Girls Foundation centre in Loosuk, Kenya, drinks from a fountain that draws its water from solar-powered panels that condense water vapour from the air, August, 11, 2018. Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Benson Rioba

Girls formerly trekked up to five kilometres a day in search of clean water during particularly dry periods, sometimes bringing them into contact with members of their former community, Salapei said.

The centre, given 40 of the water vapour-condensing panels by the company that builds them, now creates about 400 litres of clean water each day, enough to provide all the drinking water the centre needs.

The "hydropanels", produced by U.S.-based technology company Zero Mass Water, pull water vapour from the air and condense it into a reservoir.

Cody Friesen, Zero Mass Water's founder and chief executive officer, said the company's project with the Samburu Girls Foundation was an example of its efforts to make sure the technology "is accessible to people across the socioeconomic spectrum".

The panels provided to the Samburu Girls Foundation cost about $1,500 each, foundation officials said.

Zero Mass Water has so far sold or donated the panels in 16 countries, including South Africa.

 Girls at the Samburu Girls Foundation centre in Loosuk, Kenya, gather near an installation of solar-powered panels that condense water vapour from the air, August 11, 2018.
Girls at the Samburu Girls Foundation centre in Loosuk, Kenya, gather near an installation of solar-powered panels that condense water vapour from the air, August 11, 2018. Image: Thomson Reuters Foundation/Benson Rioba
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Saving trees

George Sirro a solar engineer with Solatrend Ltd., a Nairobi based solar equipment company, said such devices can be a huge help not only to people but in slowing deforestation that is driving climate change and worsening drought in Kenya.

Often people with inadequate water cut trees to boil the water they do find to make it safe, he said, driving deforestation.

Philip Lerno a senior chief in Loosuk, where the girls' foundation is located, said he hopes to see the panels more widely used in the surrounding community, which usually experiences long dry periods each year.

He said community members, having seen the devices in use at the school, hope to acquire some of their own if they can find the funding.

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Geographies in DepthNature and Biodiversity
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