can beijing turn smog into diamonds? an artist bets his own money on it - office air purifier

by:Yovog     2022-10-20
can beijing turn smog into diamonds? an artist bets his own money on it  -  office air purifier
Liu Min, Beijing's mother-to-be, is worried about the baby's future.
She feels anxious when she thinks of China's youngest lung cancer patient, who is only 8 years old.
Air pollution is definitely a popular problem in Beijing.
Now, an artist who is more than 4,000 miles away is starting to act.
Great Ann Roosegaarde, Dutchdesigner and architect, created 23-feet-tall, air-
Clear the "smog-free Tower" and if he gets the green light from the mayor's office, he is ready to ship it to Beijing, saying he has had five rounds of talks with the mayor.
His tower works like a huge outdoor air purifier, and Roosegaarde says it can clean 30,000 m³ of the air in an hour.
This means that inand-a-
For half a day, it can clean the air in the atypical football field.
It works by ionization technology, just as the hair sticks to the surface of the balloon.
The tower consumes a small amount of electricity, which is equivalent to a home.
Use water boiler.
He said he was in trouble at clean eda Park in Rotterdam and is now looking for a partner in China to build and install his tower there.
Tiny toxic particles called PM 2.
Lungs can be inhaled.
Research from the Berkeley Earth
Profits from scientific surveys of Climate Change show that 1.
6 million people die from air pollution every year in China
The harsh reality of modernization.
Beijing has introduced various measures, including tax cuts for the purchase of hybrid cars.
At the beginning of December, one of the worst days of the year, smog revealed that there were still serious problems.
Smog is a scourge known to residents like Liu Min.
"I really want to do it in Beijing first.
It's the city [that]
"It inspired me to do this," Roosevelt said . " He added that after more than two years of travel to the Chinese capital, he was sure of that.
Now he is facing a new obstacle: the mayor's office has been delayed.
"This is a very sensitive political topic.
He said he was also contacted by air-conditioning manufacturers, including well-known Chinese companies such as Gree Electric.
But he decided to work with the public first through local governments and possibly Tsinghua University. According to Roosegaarde, Tsinghua University has also shown interest.
"You must build trust;
"This is China," he said.
In a design event in 2013, Roosegaardefirst, when visiting Beijing as a speaker, came up with the idea of a smoke-free Tower.
He runs a studio in the Netherlands, responsible for design and construction projects, and receives contracts and commissions from museums and local governments.
The tower was the first project he started with his own money.
In July, he listed the project on Kickstarter with the goal of raising 50,000 euros ($54,350)
Eventually raised 113,153 euros in two months.
One of his rewards for donorsis is a set of rings with a cube in it that consists of collected smoke particles that are 42% carbon.
If you place carbon under high pressure, you will get a diamond.
Roosegaarde's latest goal is to install his towers in 20 to 25 public parks in Beijing.
He plans to offer a lease in order to reduce the cost.
He wants to expand to other developing countries, such as India and Mexico, that face similar air pollution problems later.
Requests for comments from the mayor's office of Beijing by telephone and email were not answered.
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