In Germany, the WaterFoundation (WasserStiftung) and industrial designer Peter Trautwein developed the CloudFishe
In Germany, the WaterFoundation (WasserStiftung) and industrial designer Peter Trautwein developed the CloudFisher, a device that collects drinking water from fog. It uses a double layer of fine mesh with mixed hydrophilic/hydrophobic patterning to promote droplet formation, and a geogrid with rubber tensioners to withstand strong winds. Power-free and low-maintenance, it can yield tens of liters per m² on good days when placed in marine-fog corridors. In Morocco’s Anti-Atlas, it has been deployed with NGO Dar Si Hmad to supply villages. Aqualonis manufactures and scales the systems, while universities monitor weather to optimize yield and durability. Units are set vertically or slightly tilted on windward ridges; droplets are guttered to pipes and stored in cool underground tanks. UV-resistant PP/PE mesh on stainless frames, simple cleaning, and bird guards enable long service. Gravity distribution improves hygiene and reduces water-fetching labor, and the approach is spreading as a dryland adaptation.
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