Yep, desiccants are too weak.
Dehumidifiers do heat up the air. Do google it. It heats up the air to remove moisture. Hotter air cannot hold as much moisture as colder air. Thus, moisture is removed when air is heated.
Airflow is usually in the few hundreds per cfm. I think a typhoon is millions of cfm
A strong dehumidifier can do a few hundreds per cfm at most though. A smaller fan would remove air faster.
You are mistaken on how dehumidification works.
Hot warm air holds more moisture. As the air cools down moisture is released.
If you have been googling dehumidifer for industrial purposes. They pump hot air into a space and then exhaust it to take the moisture out of the plant. I work in a food processing plant and this is done at cleanup so the floor is dry and ready for production in the morning.
All this being said refrigeration or air conditioning dehumidify a space as well. Again by lowering the temperatures. That's why most portable home AC units have a drain on them.
@tim
I've been looking through different options for you because your setup does sound quite large. I don't know what your budget is or anything but I'll pass along ideas I think could work.
Are you opposed to running a cold water line "coil" in some ducting? If you do this at an airflow
change in direction with a drain at the base it might knock enough moisture out of the air for you. This is really only a good option if your site has a certain level of water consumption already. Or you are willing to invest in pumps compressors and fans, this is then a refrigeration/ac system
Edited: sorry was on my phone forgot the blue bit