Global air quality has been declining over the years; and the effects are hard
to ignore: According to the World Health
Organization, 99
percent of the population is now breathing in polluted air; and it is
responsible for 7 million premature deaths annually.
More than 50 percent of the
population
lives in cities — which are hotspots for air
pollution
— a number predicted to reach 68 percent by 2050. Incredibly harmful to human
health, air pollution is linked to public health concerns
including
cancer, cardiovascular disease, respiratory diseases, diabetes mellitus; and
various reproductive, neurological and immune disorders.
Urban areas can also become “heat islands” — where temperatures are higher,
thanks to the abundance of concrete surfaces absorbing, rather than
reflecting,
the sun's heat. With climate change, heat-island temperatures will be hotter
each year; and as more people migrate to cities, the number of people vulnerable
to the health effects of air pollution will also increase.
German startup Green City Solutions
(GCS) is, much like its name suggests, on a mission to clean city air by
bringing nature back. Combining pollution-absorbing plants with digital
technology, Green City’s solution merges air-purifying moss with smart sensors,
active ventilation and irrigation technology. The company spent years
researching and developing its solution — with a key breakthrough involving the
identification of the most suitable species of moss (out of 16,000 potential
candidates), which is now growing at the company’s vertical moss farm.
“As the first green plant on our planet, moss can absorb and bind particles from
the air like no other plant. It stores water and serves as a natural air
conditioner through evaporative cooling,” founder and CEO Peter
Sänger
told Sustainable Brands®. “Because it absorbs everything it needs via
the air, it can reduce pollutants like fine dust. Most of the absorbed fine dust
is metabolized, which means that the moss grows on the dirt in the air. These
properties make moss a perfect ally in the fight against air pollution and heat
islands in cities.”
Green City’s solution works with the help of vertical moss mats inserted into
biofilters. A ventilation system then draws in polluted and heated city air and
passes it through the dense layer of moss, which leaves the air much cleaner and
cooler — the filters humidify the air and cool it by up to 4° Celsius,
creating fresh air zones. The system can help drastically improve urban air
quality — where the population is dense and where greenery might have a hard
time taking root thanks to all the paved surfaces.
The moss-filter technology is integrated into different formats that offer
multiple benefits in areas where space may be limited: The
CityTree with its seating, for
example, also functions as street
furniture; while
the CityBreeze combines
the moss filter with a large, digital screen that can serve as a sustainable
advertising or information pillar. They can also work as charging stations for
e-bikes or electric vehicles, or provide an open WLAN hotspot.
CityBreeze in Leipzig's Allee-Center | Image credit: Green City Solutions
With the cleverly integrated IoT technology, GCS can supervise the status and
performance of every filter in the field. The technology ensures the vitality of
the moss and makes the moss filter a low-maintenance, long-lasting system. The
technology also makes it possible to measure the amount of air filtered and
collect relevant data on air quality.
“Since air pollution is not always visible to the human eye, we visualize
air-quality-related data and provide them as part of performance reports to our
customers,” Sänger explains. “The temperature and air humidity of the inflowing
and outflowing air can also be determined. The data can also be shown on screens
right on the biofilter itself. This helps a great deal to make an intangible
problem more relatable for the public.”
CityTrees have been successfully planted in cities including Berlin, Leipzig, London and Cork, Ireland. In third-party assessments, GCS was able to demonstrate a fine-dust filter
effect of up to 82 percent for its moss filters, with air improvement still
detectable at a distance of 5 meters. Sänger says the CityTree can clean the air
for 10,000 people per hour.
GCS’ goal is for its products to be part of a multipronged solution
to provide clean and fresh air for 500 million people by 2030 and contribute to
the decarbonization of urban infrastructure.
“Our products can be an important element in the transformation of cities to be
healthier, more sustainable and climate resilient. Of course, there is no single
cure-all here — ideally, our products are always embedded in an overall strategy
consisting of various measures. For this purpose, we like to work together with
different stakeholders during the implementation to achieve an optimal result.”
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Scarlett Buckley is a London-based freelance sustainability writer with an MSc in Creative Arts & Mental Health.
Published May 5, 2023 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST