Project Status



Project Type:  Solar Kiosk

Regional Program: Western Kenya WaSH Program

Project Phase:  Raising Funds
Estimated Install Date (?):  2025

Project Features


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Community Profile

In regions like Western Kenya, where water scarcity is a pressing issue, the lack of safe, reliable water leads to profound consequences, affecting not only individuals but entire communities. Without access to clean water, people face preventable health issues, their income decreases, and they struggle to thrive.

Community members rely on the healthcare facility's water source, which can cause life-altering delays in everyone's day. Healthcare workers often have to wait in line to collect the water they need to provide crucial medical care to their patients. Community members spend so much time waiting that they have little time for anything else. Students get to school late, missing out on the opportunity for a well-rounded education.

Increased collection time has also been shown to negatively affect the educational success of students, who report being late to school, lacking morale and ability to focus, and fatigue due to their water collection responsibilities. - Sage Journal

Reliable water access is just as important as clean water. While a protected water source can alleviate some of the effects of the water crisis, it’s the functionality of that source that truly matters. If a water source experiences long wait times, the community returns to square one, facing the same challenges.

Long lines at a spring.

However, we are excited to pioneer a solution we haven't used in this region before!

A solar-powered pump system attached to a well will provide the needed water for this community. A kiosk outside of the healthcare center will allow community members, not just the healthcare center staff and patients, to collect water. This approach will reduce wait times and enable community members to quickly and efficiently collect water and return to their daily endeavors.

A solar community kiosk in Southeastern Kenya.

Steps Toward a Solution

This project is part of an upgrade to a solar-powered piped water system at a community healthcare facility. After further evaluation, the specific healthcare center will be determined later in the spring. 

What Makes This Project Unique
This project will be a two-part solar energy system. A solar panel will supply electricity to run a submersible pump in the well. Pipes will be connected to the well and pump water to a storage tank that will gravity-feed water to pipes within the clinic's key service areas. A second water pipeline will supply water to a kiosk on the outside of the clinic fence, providing clean, safe water to the surrounding community.

Community Education & Ownership
Hygiene and sanitation training are integral to our water projects. Training is tailored to each community's specific needs and includes key topics such as proper water handling, improved hygiene practices, disease transmission prevention, and care of the new water point. Safe water and improved hygiene habits foster a healthier future for everyone in the community. Encouraged and supported by the guidance of our team, a water user committee representative of the community's diverse members assumes responsibility for maintaining the water point, often gathering fees to ensure its upkeep.

We're just getting started, check back soon!


Project Photos


Project Type

Solar water systems use energy from the sun to power a low-maintenance submersible (underground) electric pump. The solar-powered pump is ideal for pulling water from an already-existing source without the input of human energy and for transporting it to a more convenient location. The pump collects water in tanks to serve a larger population. When the user is ready to access the water, all they have to do is visit a public kiosk and turn on the tap.


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