Fog catchers: improving Mexico’s climate resilience using traditional knowledge

Source(s): Climate Home News
A little girl trying to open a water tap in Mexico.
Ruslana Iurchenko/Shutterstock

A Mexican climate resilience project is adopting the traditional practice of fog catching to address the impacts of water scarcity.

Using fine mesh that has a high capacity for moisture absorption, the structure retains water particles during foggy nights which, when condensed, falls into a central trough connected to a reservoir container.

Driven by the indigenous community, the technique is just one of a number of ancestral methods the project is harnessing to combat climate change vulnerability in the state of Oaxaca.

The region, located between the Pacific Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico, sits between two tropical cyclone basins, and 83% of its 570 municipalities are at high risk of extreme hydrometeorological events, namely drought and frost.

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Country and region Mexico
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