Water from Wind

January 31st, 2007

What’s possible when resources get allocated to values? All tax paying Americans are doing our best to support genocide in Iraq, while the people who run the show are building floating and flying palaces to entertain their psychotic whims. In other news, the planet is withering and dying.

Australia is in the midst of drought induced collapse right now. Regardless of the rhetoric surrounding energy, water is THE most critical issue of them all. Don’t take my word for it.

As the “surge” in Iraq accelerates, think about the Aussie who is making endless amounts of water from the wind. Will his invention ever see the light of day? How many minutes worth of funding from that stupid war would be required to deploy these systems in drought prone areas?

If you, or someone you know, has the capital and the willingness to carry out the due diligence on this, ask yourself the question: What’s more important than water?

Or, maybe we’re supposed to wait for the billionaires with the former Navy SEALS on staff to do the right thing?

Via: The Australian:

Water from wind

OPINION
Phillip Adams
January 27, 2007

FOR all sorts of personal and political reasons, Max Whisson is one of my most valued friends. We first made contact at the beginning of the AIDS epidemic, when this most ethical of men was a principal guardian of our Red Cross blood supply. More recently he’s been applying his considerable scientific skills to the flow of another precious fluid. Water.

Does this country face a more urgent issue? Will the world have a greater problem? While we watch our dams dry, our rivers die, our lakes and groundwater disappear, while we worry about the financial and environmental costs of desalination and the melting of the glaciers and the icecaps, Max has come up with a brilliant and very simple idea.

It involves getting water out of the air. And he’s not talking about cloud-seeding for rain. Indeed, he just might have come up with a way of ending our ancient dependence on rain, that increasingly unreliable source.

And that’s not all. As well as the apparently empty air providing us with limitless supplies of water, Max has devised a way of making the same “empty” air provide the power for the process. I’ve been to his lab in Western Australia. I’ve seen how it works.

There’s a lot of water in the air. It rises from the surface of the oceans to a height of almost 100 kilometres. You feel it in high humidity, but there’s almost as much invisible moisture in the air above the Sahara or the Nullarbor as there is in the steamy tropics. The water that pools beneath an air-conditioned car, or in the tray under an old fridge, demonstrates the principle: cool the air and you get water. And no matter how much water we might take from the air, we’d never run out. Because the oceans would immediately replace it.

Trouble is, refrigerating air is a very costly business. Except when you do it Max’s way, with the Whisson windmill. Until his inventions are protected by international patents, I’m not going to give details. Max isn’t interested in profits – he just wants to save the world – but the technology remains “commercial in confidence” to protect his small band of investors and to encourage others.

In essence, windmills haven’t changed in many centuries. The great propellers producing electricity on modern wind farms are direct descendants of the rusty galvo blades that creak on our farm’s windmills – and the vanes that lifted Don Quixote from his saddle.

Usually a windmill has three blades facing into the wind. But Whisson’s design has many blades, each as aerodynamic as an aircraft wing, and each employing “lift” to get the device spinning. I’ve watched them whirr into action in Whisson’s wind tunnel at the most minimal settings. They start spinning long, long before a conventional windmill would begin to respond. I saw them come alive when a colleague opened an internal door.

And I forgot something. They don’t face into the wind like a conventional windmill; they’re arranged vertically, within an elegant column, and take the wind from any direction.

The secret of Max’s design is how his windmills, whirring away in the merest hint of a wind, cool the air as it passes by. Like many a great idea, it couldn’t be simpler – or more obvious. But nobody thought of it before.

With three or four of Max’s magical machines on hills at our farm we could fill the tanks and troughs, and weather the drought. One small Whisson windmill on the roof of a suburban house could keep your taps flowing. Biggies on office buildings, whoppers on skyscrapers, could give independence from the city’s water supply. And plonk a few hundred in marginal outback land – specifically to water tree-lots – and you could start to improve local rainfall.

This is just one of Whisson’s ways to give the world clean water. Another, described in this column a few years back, would channel seawater to inland communities; a brilliant system of solar distillation and desalination would produce fresh water en route. All the way from the sea to the ultimate destination, fresh water would be produced by the sun. The large-scale investment for this hasn’t been forthcoming – but the “water from air” technology already exists. And works.

If you’re interested, email me at PhillipAdams1@bigpond.com. After some filtering I’ll pass the messages on to Max, particularly if you have a few million to invest. Better still, you may be the Premier of Western Australia or the Prime Minister of a drought-afflicted country suddenly expressing concerns about climate change. In that case, I’ll give you Max’s phone number.

Australia needs a few Whissons at the moment – and the Whissons need some initial government funding to get their ideas off the ground. For the price of one of John Howard’s crappy nuclear reactors, Max might be able to solve a few problems. Ours and the world’s.

Posted in Environment | Top Of Page

One Response to “Water from Wind”

  1. JW Smythe says:

    This sounds like a neat idea, but there seem to be some problems with it.

    There was a good discussion on Slashdot.org about it last night. Well, I’m sure it’s continuing through today.

    To do what he’s implying, to reduce the pressure enough on the low pressure side of the blades, he’d be producing lift similar to a 747 at takeoff.

    Really, it sounds like he’s assuming the perceived temperature change from a fan is a real temperature change.

    It would be nice to see a product. By that last paragraph, the guy is seeking investors for an idea, and a prototype that just looks cool, but doesn’t necessarily do anything.

    I have my own ideas on how to do something like this, that I drew up the plans for several years ago. I just need time and a little money. It could work though. 🙂

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