





Jon works on deployable desalination and water treatment systems for use in humanitarian crises in developing economies.
Read the full story on Jon and his work:
Engineering Clean Water for Communities
Jon Bessette grew up in upstate New York, where he spent most of his time hiking the Adirondacks, sketching, and taking things apart. His passion for design led him to study mechanical engineering and studio art at State University of New York at Buffalo. While there, he constructed high payload Unmanned Aerial Vehicles for emergencies, learned traditional methods for water treatment in India, and studied ice-penetrating radar, a technique that enhances models for sea-level rise.
Jon has led service trips abroad to teach English, taught an undergraduate course on service learning and critical thinking, and taught science in public schools. He is also an EMT.
Design in these scenarios is nontrivial. Robust supply chains often do not exist, the need for reduced maintenance is crucial, and adaptability is necessary for mercurial crises. One of John’s recent projects focused on a novel control scheme for solar-powered electrodialysis desalination that eliminated the need for batteries, which are expensive and difficult to maintain in emergency scenarios in developing economies. While this is one important step, many more need to be taken for the realization of this deployable desalination system. Jon believes the creation of this water treatment system will be a significant benefit to highly constrained and historically underprivileged communities.
For his work addressing water scarcity, Jon was awarded a 2024-25 Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab (J-WAFS) Fellowship.
Mar 21, 2023
Oct 17, 2022
Dec 14, 2023