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New Zealand air farmers are cashing in on China’s air pollution

China’s chronic air pollution has created business opportunities for entrepreneurs in New Zealand and Canada to export air. Are they selling hope, or hot air?

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The set of the movie "The Fellowship of the Ring" sits atop a hill in front of Mt. Sommers on New Zealand’s South Island, where a handful of companies are harvesting air to sell to China. Photo: Reuters

Pulling a trailer packed with dive tanks and a compression motor, the three co-founders of Breathe Ezy drive around the scenic mountains and valleys of New Zealand’s South Island collecting air.

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Phillip Duval, Xu Yang and Gerry Walmisley are air farmers – or air harvesters as they prefer to be known – making money from fresh air.

They’re not the first – and probably won’t be the last – entrepreneurs to try and turn China’s chronic air pollution into a business opportunity: in their case by selling cans of New Zealand air.  

China has been experiencing extremely bad pollution in recent months, with a third of the country’s cities issuing red alerts.

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Queenstown in New Zealand’s South Island, with the snow capped Remarkables mountain range providing a stunning backdrop. Photo: Corbis
Queenstown in New Zealand’s South Island, with the snow capped Remarkables mountain range providing a stunning backdrop. Photo: Corbis

Pollution leads to a range of health problems, and was the cause of more than 1 million deaths in the country in 2012, according to the World Health Organisation.

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