The Korea Herald

소아쌤

Korean municipality to sell canned pure air in cooperation with Canadian firm

By a2017001

Published : June 28, 2017 - 16:18

    • Link copied

HADONG -- The town of Hadong in southeastern South Korea will sell canned fresh mountain air in a tie-up with a Canadian company amid growing concerns about air pollution, municipality officials said Wednesday.

The municipality said it will hold a ceremony on Friday to mark the dedication of a plant on a site of 99 square meters in the town's Uisin Village to produce canned air coming from Mount Jiri in the region.

According to them, the can of pure air with the trademark of Jiri Air, which carries eight liters of fresh air from the mountain, will be sold at a price of 15,000 won (around $13) each at drugstores across the country. The amount of the air in one can is equivalent to 160 lungfuls that a customer takes for a second.

This undated file photo shows a product of canned fresh air manufactured by Canadian firm Vitality Air. (Yonhap) This undated file photo shows a product of canned fresh air manufactured by Canadian firm Vitality Air. (Yonhap)

Inhaling the air through a built-in mask makes customers feel like they are in a forest of cypresses as it has a cypress aroma.

The air comes from a forest 700 to 800 meters above sea level where no people live. A study on the air's quality conducted by Gyeongnam National University of Science and Technology showed that the air captured in the forest over 24 hours has an average 0.006 parts per million of sulfur dioxide, 0.3 ppm of carbon monoxide, 0.030 ppm of ozone and 0.010 ppm of nitrogen dioxide -- way below the standard for air environment.

 The average density of the hazardous particulate matter PM-10, measuring below 10 microns in diameter, or 10 thousandths of a millimeter, and PM2.5, harmful particles that are smaller than 2.5 microns in diameter, reached 22 micrograms and 9 micrograms, respectively, per 1 cubic meter. The figures fail to exceed half the standard limit of 50 micrograms and 25 micrograms, respectively.

The dedication of the plant will come after the municipality signed an investment deal in March with the Canadian firm Vitality Air to establish a joint venture to implement the project.

The joint venture, Hadong Vitality Air, is 50 percent owned by the Canadian firm, 40 percent by the municipality and 10 percent by the distributor SL Biotech.

Vitality Air exports canned fresh air captured from the Rocky Mountains to China, a country plagued by pollution problems.

The plant of Hadong Vitality Air has a production capacity of 1,000 to 2,000 air cans per day.

If the domestic sales of the air product turn out to be successful, the municipality will move to export the product to China, India and the Middle East.

Yoon Sang-ki, chief of the municipality, expressed hope that "the commercialization of the pure nature in the region will enhance the image of Hadong around the world." (Yonhap)