Today’s Solutions: May 10, 2026

More than two billion people live in countries affected by a lack of clean drinking water. Soon, a Canadian innovation — inspired by a biological adaptation found in certain lizard species — will make it possible for people to pull a glass of water right out of the air.

The company, called AWN Nanotech, has developed a device that absorbs water vapor from the atmosphere and converts it to liquid fresh water using almost no energy. Known as an “atmospheric water generator”, or AWG, the device consists of a high-tech cloth specifically engineered to mimic absorption capabilities of the skin of thorny devil lizards, which pulls moisture from the environment directly into the lizard’s mouth. Each square meter of the nanotech textile can convert up to 12 liters of water per hour, depending on the air’s humidity.

Although the device is not the first to convert moisture in the air to water, the company claims that its product is more energy efficient than other similar available materials. The technology uses only 0.01 kWh of solar energy (about 15 percent of what a standard lightbulb uses) to produce one liter of water, and the absorption process itself requires no energy at all.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

What OB-GYNs want every mother to know about how pregnancy changes you

With Mother’s Day just behind us, conversations about everything that mothers give are top of mind. However, the biology of pregnancy has something more ...

Read More

What Hanoi learned by tearing down its park fences and opening up to everyone

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In many cities, entering a park is a deliberate act. You adjust your route, find a gate, and ...

Read More

What cities can learn from Spokane’s approach to homelessness

The common approach cities take to deal with homelessness is tough enforcement: ticketing people for panhandling or sleeping in doorways or busing them to ...

Read More

New nasal spray treatment could help prevent Alzheimer’s

According to the World Health Organization, around 55 million people worldwide suffer from dementia. Although there’s currently no cure, researchers are unabatedly looking for ...

Read More