Clean Drinking Water for 1250 Villagers in Morocco
Organization | High Atlas Foundation |
---|---|
Region | Morocco |
Website | Website |
ProjectLeader | Yossef Ben-Meir |
Linked Problems & Solutions
|
---|
This project seeks to provide potable water for 5 villages in Morocco's High Atlas Mountains. Approximately 60% of rural Moroccans lack piped potable water. Unhealthy drinking water causes frighteningly high infant mortality (many families lose half their children to water-borne diseases), shorter life spans and reduced energy for livelihoods. Further, time spent to procure non-potable water adds to the already substantial burden of women and girls and prevents their participation in education.
Challenge
Lacking potable water, villagers drink from irrigation ditches and streams that contain high rates of harmful micro-organisms (due to being open and pre-used by upstream communities and animals). The terrain is such that there is no water table to access with wells. Springs are usually in areas extremely far or inaccessible from villages - such as rocky escarpments near the top of mountains. Infant mortality reaches 186 deaths per 1,000 births, more than 4 times the official national average.
Long-Term Impact
Long-term goals are: 1) completion of potable water systems in 5 High Atlas villages; 2) reduction in water-borne diseases and halving of infant mortality; 3) greater awareness of health issues and changes in hygiene and sanitation practices; 4) greater availability of time for women and girls to engage in education and income generating activities; 5) heightened capacities to maintain water systems and initiate development activities; and 6) creation of a model of inter-agency collaboration.
References
- http://www.highatlasfoundation.org
- https://highatlasfoundation.org/project/clean-drinking-water/
- https://highatlasfoundation.org/the-importance-of-water/
- https://highatlasfoundation.org/clean-water-for-a-healthy-community/
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjHODfa5coo
Additional Documentation
https://www.globalgiving.org//pfil/6501/projdoc.pdf
Project Gallery