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A handout photo released by tech start-up Envinity Group shows the group’s managing partners (from left) Peter van Wees, Simon van der Burg and Tim Petter posing next to the giant vacuum machine created by van Wees to filter polluted air. Photo: AFP

Is this giant, smog-sucking vacuum cleaner the solution to air pollution?

Dutch inventors have unveiled what they called the world’s first giant outside air vacuum cleaner - a large purifying system intended to filter out toxic tiny particles from the atmosphere surrounding the machine.

“It’s a large industrial filter about eight metres long, made of steel... placed basically on top of buildings and it works like a big vacuum cleaner,” said Henk Boersen, a spokesman for the Envinity Group which unveiled the system in Amsterdam.

The system is said to be able to suck in air from a 300-metre radius - and from up to seven kilometres upwards. It can treat some 80,000 cubic metres of air an hour, filtering out 100 per cent of fine particles and 95 per cent of ultra-fine particles, the company said, referring to tests carried out by the Energy Research Centre of the Netherlands (ECN) on its prototype.

“A large column of air will pass through the filter and come out clear,” Boersen said, speaking on the sidelines of a major two-day offshore energy conference in Amsterdam.
Envinity’s machine can clean 80,000 cubic metres of air per hour. Photo: AFP

Fine particles are caused by emissions from burning wood and other fuels as well as industrial combustion, and have “adverse effects on health,” according to the European Environment Agency.

About 90 per cent of EU residents are exposed to levels of such particles - which can be carcinogenic - above those recommended by the World Health Organisation.

As for ultra-fine particles, they are released by emissions from vehicles as well as aeroplanes, according to Envinity, and can “damage the nervous system, including brain cells, and also cause infections.”

Governments, businesses and airports are already interested in the project, Boersen said.

“Envinity Group is making it possible for governments and businesses to protect their environment against the ‘silent killers‘ that are fine- and ultra-fine particles, and to stop worrying about dramatic economic effects,” the group’s website says.

Another air-purifying system called the “Smog Free Tower” was installed in Beijing last month and launched by the Dutch artist Daan Roosegaarde.

Using patented ozone-free ion technology, it can clean up to 30,000 cubic metres of air an hour as it blows past the tower, collecting more than 75 per cent of the harmful particles, Studio Roosegaarde said in a statement.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Boffins unveil giant vacuum cleaner to fight air pollution
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