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In The Heart of Paraíba’s Cariri, Where Water Is Worth More Than Gold, Families Transform Saltwater into Drinking Water with Solar Houses That Produce 16 Liters a Day and Become a “Miracle” Against Drought

Written by Carla Teles
Published on 14/12/2025 at 22:48
No coração do Cariri paraibano, onde água vale mais que ouro, famílias transformam água salgada em água potável com casinhas solares que produzem 16 litros por dia
Cariri paraibano: famílias transformam água salgada em água potável com dessalinizador solar. Entenda água salobra e o método.
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With Simple Technology Created by Researchers from the State University of Paraíba, the System Uses Sun, Glass, and Canvas to Produce Up to 16 Liters Per Day of Freshwater from Saline Wells

In the Paraíba Cariri, families transform salty water into drinking water in a scenario where every sip counts. In one of the regions with the least rainfall in the country, the routine is guided by extreme economy, reuse, and cisterns, because water is worth more than gold when drought strikes.

Even with water underground, the reality for many residents is harsh: to drill a well, one must overcome deep rock, and when the water finally appears, it is too saline to drink. That’s where a low-cost, simple maintenance solution came into play, capable of changing the lives of those who deal with scarcity daily.

The Drought That Changes the Value of Everything

In the aridity of Cariri, water defines what can be planted, what can be raised, and even what can be dreamed. When the rain fails, there is no room for waste.

Every Drop Becomes a Strategy, whether it is water for reuse, from a dam, or from a cistern, because the priority is to survive with the minimum.

The Well Exists, But the Water Is Not Drinkable

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The presence of groundwater does not guarantee safety. In Caraúbas, for example, the well water is described as “very saline,” to the point that it is used first for animals.

In measurements taken by technicians, the size of the challenge is clear: 7 g of salt per liter, above the limit indicated for drinking water, which is at most 5 g of salt per liter. Result: having water and not being able to drink it becomes a daily frustration.

The Turning Point Came from Research and Simplicity

The answer came from the determination of students and researchers from the State University of Paraíba. Research began in 2010 with a clear goal: to create equipment that is simple, easy to install, easy to maintain, and low cost.

That’s how families transform salty water into drinking water with a system made from accessible materials in the region, such as glass, cement, and canvas.

How the Solar House That Desalinates Works

The desalinator works like a greenhouse. The house is supplied with saline water from the well and, with the heat of the sun from the caatinga, the internal temperature can reach 70ºC.

The steam rises, hits the glass ceiling, flows down the side gutters, and is ready for consumption, while the salt remains trapped in the canvas. Then, it’s cleaning and reuse, without relying on sophisticated equipment.

How Much Water It Produces and Why This Makes a Difference

Each house produces up to 16 liters per day of fresh water. In practice, the equation presented is straightforward: for every 50 liters of saline water, the desalinator produces 16 liters of fresh water.

It is not a solution for waste; it is a solution for the essentials: drinking safely, cooking, and ensuring dignity in a place where access to good water is the biggest bottleneck.

The Real Impact on Families in the Semiarid Region

Only in Paraíba, 200 families already use the system, according to reports from the field. And the effect is not just physical. When families transform salty water into drinking water, they gain autonomy and a new standard of tranquility.

The water is described as “excellent,” even compared as better than mineral water by those who spent years drinking what was available, not what was ideal. After everything that has happened, it feels like a miracle, but it is technology applied to the realities of the semiarid region.

What’s Ahead

The next step of the research is to find a way to take advantage of the salt that remains after purification.

In the meantime, the change is already reaching the future at home: with good water, families are returning to plan their permanence in the territory and strengthening a path of coexistence with the semiarid region, linked to agroecology and to technologies suitable for the local context.

In your opinion, families transforming salty water into drinking water with solar houses should become public policy throughout the semiarid region, or do you see limitations that need to be addressed first?

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Guilhermando
Guilhermando
21/12/2025 16:55

O governo deveria aproveitar o conhecimento do sertanejo e ajudá-los,
Nao é necessário repensar o que ja foi pensado e funciona.

Eros Lenita Gomes
Eros Lenita Gomes
20/12/2025 21:37

Eu moro no cariri psraibano,numa chácara e a água que utilizo é salobra. De poço artesiano. Gostaria de saber como conseguir esse equipamento desalinizador. Se puder me dar um retorno eu agradeço imensamente. Meu e-mail Eroslenita@gmail.com.

Fernando
Fernando
16/12/2025 17:18

É essencial que se aumente a escala de produção dessa água potável. Processos mais bem elaborados devem ser desenvolvidos para tal objetivo. No entanto, não devemos esquecer de tratar esse sal resultante da extração da água potável, entendo que esse sal não deve ser apenas um rejeio, mas um produto que deve ter uma aplicação econômica e ecológica

Carla Teles

Produzo conteúdos diários sobre economia, curiosidades, setor automotivo, tecnologia, inovação, construção e setor de petróleo e gás, com foco no que realmente importa para o mercado brasileiro. Aqui, você encontra oportunidades de trabalho atualizadas e as principais movimentações da indústria. Tem uma sugestão de pauta ou quer divulgar sua vaga? Fale comigo: carlatdl016@gmail.com

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