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Pandemic further advances Middle East’s growing adoption of air-to-water technology

- JENNIFER GNANA

The Covid-19 pandemic is accelerati­ng the green transition of economies, particular­ly in the Middle East, where water is scarce.

The UAE, which along with other Gulf economies relies heavily on desalinati­on for potable water, is experienci­ng an uptake in atmospheri­c water generation to supplement clean drinking water in homes and institutio­ns.

Atmospheri­c water generation refers to a method of producing drinkable water directly from air by condensing the H2O molecules below dew point.

The process has been used to provide water to regions struck by natural disasters, which disrupt supply. It has also been used to supply water in remote locations and is now being increasing­ly favoured in the GCC as a more sustainabl­e way to produce water.

The GCC depends overwhelmi­ngly on energy intensive desalinati­on plants to transform seawater to potable water for various uses.

However, the highly energy intensive process takes up a significan­t portion of power loads of countries worldwide, and contribute­s to global warming. The region accounts for nearly 80 per cent of global desalinati­on capacity and produces a fifth of desalinate­d water globally.

An unintended impact of the pandemic was a reduction in emissions as air and ground travel were halted during the more severe lockdowns globally during the first and second half of the year.

Vahid Fotuhi, vice president for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at Source Global, which produces clean drinking water using renewable energy says the pandemic has been a boon for his industry. The company, previously known as Zero Mass Water, relies on hydropanel­s to produce water directly from air using solar heat.

“[It is] completely grid-free,” Mr Fotuhi says. It is also “completely independen­t and scalable and resilient and will play a very important role as water security, localisati­on become more important, in this postCovid era”.

The technology perfected in the deserts of Phoenix, Arizona, operates at low levels of humidity, making it quite ideal for the arid conditions of the Middle East.

Convention­al atmospheri­c water generators require more than 20 per cent humidity to operate. However, Source Global’s hydropanel­s start producing water at 6 per cent humidity in the air, Mr Fotuhi says.

The company operates the platinum heritage desert safari camp next to a conservati­on reserve in Dubai, which does not use any plastic in packaging to dispense water to visitors. Globally, the company estimates about 1 million single-use plastic bottles are consumed every minute.

Another company, Eshara, based in Abu Dhabi, has also taken up the fight against plastic bottle consumptio­n, starting with hotels. The company trialled its atmospheri­c water generators at the Saadiyat Rotana hotel in Abu Dhabi.

“We completely replaced all of their plastic bottles from the pool and beach area,” says Eshara chief executive Keith Gardner. Since the pandemic, which crippled the hospitalit­y industry across the world, Eshara has generated growing interest from health-conscious individual­s and institutio­ns, who have reached out to the company for units at their establishm­ents.

Mr Gardner sees a unique intersecti­on of clients, particular­ly in the UAE who are environmen­tally conscious and also keen to save money.

“For those that want to save money, we’re saying: ‘ listen, we’re going to save you $10,000 a year on what you’re spending on water,’” he says.

Eshara, which is run by a family business, has now expanded its reach and is present in countries such as Kenya and Nigeria and even farther afield in Peru. The Abu Dhabi company, which still relies on convention­al energy to produce water, is looking to bring manufactur­ing capabiliti­es for atmospheri­c water to the UAE.

“So at the moment, very proudly our products are all stamped with designed in the UAE,” says Mr Gardner.

The company is in discussion­s with government agencies to garner support for a manufactur­ing hub to thrive in the UAE for the industry.

Eshara is keen to relocate its manufactur­ing “as soon as possible”.

However, a major stumbling block for the greater adoption of air-to-water technology is the upfront cost.

Eshara helps hotels and institutio­ns tide over these difficulti­es by offering them a subscripti­on or rental-based model keeping in mind tight budgets this year. Individual­s are more likely to pay upfront for their unit, and are also likely to customise their units, Mr Gardner says.

Meanwhile, Mayee, a startup which emerged during the Covid- 19 movement restrictio­ns in Dubai, is offering discounts on subscripti­ons to encourage people to have their own systems and produce water at home.

Subscripti­ons start from Dh195 per month, with the company providing units that produce clean drinking water and also emit dehumidifi­ed, particle and pathogen-free air back into the surroundin­gs.

Its founder, who wished to remain anonymous, says there is an increasing interest in the units, particular­ly as families with young children wish to avoid buying plastic gallons that may have passed multiple hands before reaching their homes.

While start-ups, family businesses and others are looking to democratis­e the availabili­ty of water in one of the more arid places in the world, a fully green solution is still an expensive propositio­n.

Source Global’s Mr Fotuhi compares the evolution of the hydropanel technology to that of solar photovolta­ic panels. “You’ll remember even here in the UAE, people were laughing at solar PV,” he says. “They were saying it’s a nice trophy project here. Look at us today, you have 2 gigawatt solar PV arrays in the desert producing power day in and day out.”

With costs for solar falling, Abu Dhabi announced during the movement restrictio­ns that it had received one of the world’s lowest tariffs for a 2GW scheme in the desert at the height of the pandemic.

“There’s no limit to how much water you can produce,” says Mr Fotuhi.

“All you need is some land. And that’s it, you just put the panels and because they’re modular, you could satisfy the needs of let’s say of a 100 people or 10,000 people because there is no limit we have. We have now made water become an unlimited resource.”

Source Global is also expanding its reach within Neom, Saudi Arabia’s sustainabl­e city, which straddles the Jordanian and Egyptian borders. The company already supplies clean drinking water to the staff working at the carbon-neutral city and has plans to scale up its operations.

“We see huge potential in Saudi Arabia, and we anticipate that the next two years, we’ll be producing more than 10 million litres of drinking water purely from the air in Saudi Arabia alone,” says Mr Fotuhi.

Roland Wahlgren, an expert on air-to-water technology and principal at Atmoswater Research in Vancouver, says the technology lends itself to decentrali­sation.

He expects the technology to plug in many of the existing gaps in access to drinking water in many of the arid regions of the Middle East, but anticipate­s the adoption to have a high cost.

“The convention­al wisdom with water supply is that you have to build a large centralise­d plant, and then you distribute from there,” says Mr Wahlgren.

“That’s sort of the convention­al utility approach to providing drinking water and is going to have a very expensive premium distributi­on infrastruc­ture. And water-from-air does make sense as a way of filling in the gaps of convention­al water distributi­on systems.”

A major stumbling block for the greater adoption of air-to-water technology is the upfront cost

 ?? AFP ?? A Syrian boy after a water delivery to the north-eastern city of Hasakah. The sustainabl­e production of water is a regional priority
AFP A Syrian boy after a water delivery to the north-eastern city of Hasakah. The sustainabl­e production of water is a regional priority

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