$28,965.00 from profits from fiscal year 2017
Uganda is home to the world's largest refugee settlements, where families are likely to live decades in squalor with poor health, education, and livelihood conditions. Nationwide, the majority of Ugandans (60%) do not have access to clean drinking water, and the situation is more dire for refugees. Disease rates are high, with waterborne illness as the #1 cause of death for children in Uganda.
SPOUTS produces the Purifaaya ceramic water filter as an affordable, effective, sustainable, and easy to use solution for providing safe, pure water to Ugandans. These filters guarantee access to safe drinking water for refugees who cannot easily access water on their own, while reducing reliance on costly and environmentally damaging charcoal burning for boiling. This project provides clean water to Nyakabande Refugee Settlement in southwestern Uganda. Most of the refugees are Congolese nationals who fled the M23 rebellion and the broader Kivu conflict.
Indirect Impacts:
Purifaaya water filters are produced with clay locally sourced in Uganda. It is mixed with water before being pressed to form a pot that is the filter. It is then placed in a bucket with a spicket. The Purifaaya lasts 2 years and costs 25 USD, making it the most affordable solution to safe water access in Uganda households.
A World Centric partner since 2017.
When Kathy Ku spent a summer in Uganda she was struck by the lack of access to safe water. Convinced change was necessary, she teamed up with fellow Harvard student John Kye to form SPOUTS of Water in 2012. SPOUTS aims to provide 5 million Ugandans, or 14% of the population, with access to safe water by 2025, 10 years after their first Purifaaya sale. This would represent a fundamental shift in the way Ugandans approach water purification and would save thousands of lives, primarily of children.
More projects with SPOUTS:
April 2019
The location of this project is being switched to either Kyaka II Refugee Camp or Rhino Refugee Camp. Nyakabande has become more of a transit area for people who will be relocated to more permanent locations, such as Kyaka II or Rhino. The number of filters to be installed remains the same.
Tags: Impact Projects
Written by
World Centric
Read time
3 minutes
Published on
May 16, 2018
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