Water Matters

The latest on our work and those supporting it



Code Blue: No Water – episode 2


Wednesday, June 3rd, 2026by Vanessa Sherwood

IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER: The TV hospital story in this blog is purely fictional, but the story set in Sierra Leone is 100% real. Learn more about the health centers mentioned in the story by clicking the links below. Pepel Health Center: https://thewaterproject.org/community/projects/sierra-leone/well-rehabilitation-wash-project-590055 Shivakala Health Center: https://thewaterproject.org/community/projects/kenya/new-borehole-wash-project-410179/ ACT TWO: The Decisions Nobody Should Have to Make INTERIOR […]

 

Code Blue: No Water – episode 1


Wednesday, May 27th, 2026by Vanessa Sherwood

IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER: The TV hospital story in this blog is purely fictional, but the story set in Sierra Leone is 100% real. Learn more about the health center mentioned in the story by clicking the link below. Pepel Health Center: https://thewaterproject.org/community/projects/sierra-leone/well-rehabilitation-wash-project-590055 FADE IN. INTERIOR – GLEAMING HOSPITAL — DAWN A camera sweeps down a polished […]

 

A Source of Pride: What Grows When Clean Water Comes Home


Wednesday, May 20th, 2026by Vanessa Sherwood

Bernedetta Mwikali calls her tomato patch a source of pride. She says it plainly, the way someone uses a word they had to wait a long time to say honestly. In Kilela, until clean water arrived, the things she might have been proud of (like a strong harvest, a well-fed family, or a stall at […]

 

The Southeastern Kenya That I Encountered


Wednesday, May 13th, 2026by Olivia Chebet

My visit to Southeastern Kenya was one of a kind. This was my second time visiting the southeast, and things looked so different. The first time I visited the communities there, it was dry and dusty. Community members were fetching water from scoop holes, some carrying water with carts and bicycles, and others on their […]

 

What Happened When Over 200 WASH Professionals Showed Up to Talk About AI


Wednesday, May 6th, 2026by Peter

Earlier this month, The Water Project joined the Millennium Water Alliance and over 200 WASH professionals for a virtual learning event called “Tools, Trade-Offs, and Takeaways: Exploring Practical Applications of AI for Water Security.” The session brought together practitioners, technologists, and researchers to explore a question that’s becoming harder to ignore: where does AI actually […]

 

The Hospital That Runs Out of Water


Wednesday, April 29th, 2026by Jacklyne Chelagat

I arrived at Likindu Health Center in the late morning, after the rush. The waiting area was still full. Women on the benches, a few men, children leaning against their mothers. Five hundred and sixty-six patients pass through this facility on an average day. That number means nothing until you sit in the room with […]

 

Walking a Dusty Road – A Village’s Journey to Clean Water (Part 2)


Wednesday, April 22nd, 2026by Vanessa Sherwood

Last week, we walked alongside Kyanga as her village experienced a turning point — the arrival of clean water. But the true story of water begins after the pump is built. It unfolds in classrooms, farms, markets, and homes, where saved hours slowly turn into opportunity. Time: The First Economic Dividend When clean water arrives […]

 

Walking a Dusty Road – A Village’s Journey to Clean Water (Part 1)


Wednesday, April 15th, 2026by Vanessa Sherwood

The sun rises early in Uganda, spreading gold across the red earth. By 6:00 AM, Kyanga is already walking. Her sandals kick up dust along the narrow path that snakes past thorny shrubs and termite mounds. Balanced on her head is an empty yellow jerrycan, its hollow echo tapping softly with every step. The smell […]

 

Meet the Children Who Now Have Time to Dream


Wednesday, April 8th, 2026by Vanessa Sherwood

Before sunrise, the air is still cool in Karlota’s village. Thirteen-year-old Karlota used to wake in the dark, lift an empty container, and walk to the well before most of the village even stirred. By the time she arrived, a line had already formed, children shifting from foot to foot, waiting their turn. Some mornings, […]

 

From The Ground Up: How The Water Project Builds Change That Lasts


Wednesday, March 18th, 2026by Vanessa Sherwood

Community Engagement Our work begins with people, not projects. We collaborate with local NGOs and speak directly with community members to understand their needs. This helps us tailor a water solution that aligns with their goals and cultural context, giving the community a sense of ownership. Why is this so important? Because real, lasting change […]