Free fresh water for Africa and the world

Go Nat Geo

This works all over the world!  In high school physics good for six teachers showed us that a water driven vacuum pump, would even cause warm water at 30° C to boil!

So we get fresh water vapour.  Having lost all contaminants and salts.  I was shown this is a 14 year old, and 40 interesting that carry on trying to pass my high school exams.

It didn't master's degree in two metallurgy and engineering.  But I never forgot that physics demonstration.

So if we have access to sea or river water, and son light or wind week in use solar panels or weaned turbine we can easily apply the one metre of vacuum to the brown or sore water.  Brown water is a technical name for non drinkable river water.

So can suck up the water, and turn into fuel water vapour.  Would be again then a pump to a high reservoir or holding tank.  The water vapour is 1000 times easier to pump and liquid water.

So Africa are little 20 kW solar panel, will suck up river or sea water, and filled a holding tank or reservoir.  With the purest fresh water!

This is so much cheaper than remote well drilling of pumping liquid water.  It is a sort of development Water Aid should be using to he the world fresh drinking water.

And in the arctic ice we can set up fresh water on the seas.  Though we do need to add some heat, so when the pressure vents we get liquid water.  Pure drinkable water.

In the white deserts of the world!  They Africa are groups of farmers can band together, to serve their own little vacuum water plant.  And gain access to excess fresh water!  They can cell to surrounding farms.  Mass of the undercutting higher pressure desalination or the boiling of water, which is still done.

As higher pressure filtration is both energy expensive, dangerous and use frequent five changes.  The little vacuum desalination has no pads.  And it uses waste environmental energy, to provide of them as fresh water.

Ideal for field irrigation!  Where we vent the vacuum pressure at the high point in the field, and gravity distributes the water over our crops.

       Last time I was on Salfari, I saw a chaetae kil in Kenya.

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