How many times have we ever thought of quenching the thirst of so many people around the World?
How many times in life haven’t we come across such pictures and documentaries which show the people in Africa, Combodia and some of the countries which have no water supply?
Hell a number of times we have seen these and we blinked an eye into thin air and thought, if only I can!!!
Just a step closer to what can be done in a large scale, scientists at ElementFour have created something called WaterMill.

This machine can create water out of plain air, yes plain air, without any intervention. The comapny, ElementFour states that the WaterMill uses power at the rate of three electric bulbs to precipitate moisture from air and purify it into clean drinking water.
As the image suggests, this amazing invention can be set into multiple device like refrigerators, hang it on the wall, set it on the water filter and what not.
Our planet’s natural water cycle provides for all forms of life. At any given moment our planet holds 326 million cubic miles of water. Of this, 97% is saltwater and only 3% is fresh water. Of that 3%, 99.3% is locked in ice.
Our air contains 4,000 cubic miles of water. If it were a lake it would be roughly the size of the Great Lakes combined - which is the world’s largest body of fresh water - and would be constantly refilled.
In more than half the countries in the world, some of them the poorest, thirstiest, and most crowded, the air is humid enough to yield huge amounts of precious water. The atmosphere contains 4 to 25 grams of water vapor per cubic meter, while the WaterMill can change 10% to 40% of that to liquid. Water vapor is constantly replenished by Earth’s natural cycle, so extracting water from the air can continue indefinitely without impacting local ecosystems.
Most nations within 30 degrees latitude of the equator actually have more vapor than they need - an average of 15 to 20 grams of water per cubic meter of air.
Buy a WaterMill now and say that you care for environment.
Source: ElementFour
Water is Precious. Conserve the Natural Resources.
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