In developed economic areas, agriculture accounts for 70% of all freshwater use, which otherwise accounts for only 2.5% of the world’s water resources, and many industrial activities require this increasingly scarce and expensive resource. In contrast to global corporations, the interests of small agricultural entrepreneurs are less represented by governments, so their concern about their future livelihoods is fully justified. Water is the source of all life – without it, plants and animals alike die, and no farm can sustain crops and livestock without water supply.
Global warming has led to persistent droughts, melting glaciers and Arctic ice, diluting the ocean, and changing sea and atmospheric currents. Currently, humans are draining Earth’s freshwater resources faster than Earth can naturally replenish them. In addition to the severe effects of climate change, rapid population growth and civilization’s increasing water use are exacerbating the global water crisis. As the crisis deepens, agriculture’s access to fresh water decreases, limiting humanity’s access to food in the longer term. This is a self-generating, seemingly irreversible process that unfortunately causes farmers more and more places around the world endangers livelihood.
There is a new water industry technology that provides healthy drinking water for households and smaller communities, but it can also be used for industrial purposes. This solution is so self-evident that we don’t even think about it: vapor stored in the air is an inexhaustible source of water!
AWG-Europe Ltd. represents environmentally friendly “atmospheric water generator” technology that has already proven itself well in the USA, Israel or Asia, but is completely new and in Europe. Atmospheric water generators with a capacity of 10 L/day are available in the household appliance and up to 10,000 L/day capacity (modular system) in the industrial segment, and the company also offers engineering solutions tailored to individual needs. We highly recommend atmospheric water generators (AWGs) to agricultural entrepreneurs because we believe that it can be a permanent solution for many people to provide irrigation water and drinking water as well…
It would be useful if farmers and decision-makers were made aware of this brilliant opportunity and that farmers could in future not only be compensated for weather damage and crop failure, but also support this innovation in water technology!