Device that harvests water from thin air wins the James Dyson Award
Utilizing a turbine intake system, air is channeled underground through a network of piping that quickly cools the air to soil temperature (image: James Dyson Award)
Article Summary
Young Melbourne-based inventor Edward Linacre has won the 2011 James Dyson Award, making it the second year in a row where the prestigious prize has gone to an Aussie. Linacre stole this year's competition with his Airdrop irrigation concept that collects water from thin air. The Swinburne University of Technology design graduate was driven to transform an ancient cooling technique into a new sub-surface irrigation system, following the enduring Australian drought that saw high levels of farmer suicide along Australia's Murray- Darling Basin.
« Back to Device that harvests water from thin air wins the James Dyson Award
Related Articles