Improving water security for the poor

Rural Water Finance:

In Africa and Asia, at any one time, 1 in 4 waterpoints are not working – when this happens, people must turn to dirtier, more distant, or more expensive sources with all the risks and costs involved. Professor Rob Hope (University of Oxford), Monirul Alam (UNICEF), Mr L.K. Atheeq (Government of Karnataka, India), and Iris Braun (share) present REACH programme work in Bangladesh, India, and Kenya to build results-based funding models for rural water services which incentivise effective maintenance.

Delivering Safe Water in Africa & Asia

90% of the world’s population have access to infrastructure that should give them safe drinking water, yet 2.1 billion people are still going without this vital resource. Prof Katrina Charles (University of Oxford) Sara Marks (Eawag – Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology), Mr Nurul Osman (HYSAWA, Dr Saskia Nowicki (University of Oxford) and Mr Robert Gakubia (Blackburn Associates Ltd) describe how REACH programme research teams in Kenya, Bangladesh and Nepal are addressing the challenge of delivering safe water.

REACH Improving climate resilience through water security in Africa

20 million people living in the Horn of Africa have been affected by a recent and severe cycle of droughts. Better seasonal forecasts for the Horn of Africa’s arid and semi-arid lands will help governments, businesses and individuals put plans in place to reduce climate risks. Researchers Dr Meron Teferi Taye (IWMI), Professor Daniel Olago (University of Nairobi), Dr Florence Tanui (University of Nairobi) and Dr Ellen Dyer (University of Oxford) from the REACH programme’s Turkana and Awash Basin observatories describe how REACH research is translating into policy and practice in the area, with commentary from the Governor of Turkana County, Hon. Jeremiah Ekamais Lomorukai.

‘Our partnership with REACH recognises science has a critical role in designing and delivering effective policy and improving practice on the ground.’

KELLY ANN NAYLOR, ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR, WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE (WASH) SECTION, PROGRAMME DIVISION, UNICEF

'Access to water is a defining challenge for the 21st century. The UK has already helped 43 million people to access clean water, but there is far more to be done.'

UK DEPARTMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PARLIAMENTARY UNDER SECRETARY OF STATE
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