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Project Waterfall is the central focus for fundraising during UK Coffee Week™, and aims to transform lives by improving access to safe water, hygiene and sanitation in African coffee-growing countries. 100% of all funds raised from consumer donations will directly benefit this cause. The first project is providing clean water to communities in the Mbulu District of Tanzania in partnership with our service delivery partner WaterAid.

WE NEED YOUR HELP
 
  • 783 million people in the world do not have access to safe water – roughly 1 in 10 of the world’s population
  • 2,000 children die every day as a result of diseases caused by unclean water and poor sanitation – more than malaria, TB and HIV combined
  • Access to clean, safe water and good sanitation is a basic human right and together we can make this a reality for those in need. Get Involved
   (Photo: WaterAid/Marco Betti)
 

 

In Tanzania

  Only 54% of people currently live with access to a clean source of water
  • On average women and children spend over two hours a day collecting water 
  • Almost 21,000 children under five die every year of diarrhoeal diseases as a direct result of unsafe water and poor sanitation
The project will take place in Mbulu District, a rural area where marginalised communities who are often tribal live. Mbulu District has been identified as a being among the most in need of access to improved water supply.

Bundaa Joseph, 10 years old collecting water from a traditional water source (see image).

The water is very thick and muddy. There are flies buzzing around, things jumping in the water and bubbles surfacing from the gasses caused by de-composition of human excrement and rubbish. This is a typhoid area. There are four boys at the water source, collecting water to drink and wash their clothes. Ten year old Bundaa Joseph’s family can’t afford to pay for water from other holes, so Bundaa is sent every day to collect water from a stagnant pool.

Bundaa Joseph says: “I come here to play in the daytime. I have no school. I would like to go, but my parents have never sent me. I do not know why, but I am the only child at home and if I go to school, there will be no one to help my parents. I have to fetch water, and graze the animals, wash clothes and kitchen utensils. I use the water here for drinking and bathing and washing my clothes. The animals don’t drink here so it is safe. My parents always get sick from diarrhoea, I don’t know why, but they have to go to the hospital. I’m not happy to use this water. Some people use it like a toilet. Even my friends say I should not use it because people go to the toilet there, but it tastes not bad, just salty.


  (Photo: WaterAid/Jane Scobie)

A young girl using the broken pump while others wait their turn to fetch water (Photo: WaterAid)

Project Waterfall is providing some of the poorest and most marginalised communities in Tanzania with access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene. The current project is being implemented in Mbulu District in the Manyara Region with the assistance of WaterAid’s local partner organisation, Diocese of Mbulu Development Department (DMDD).

The water project in the Mbulu District targets the vulnerable groups of the Hadzabe tribe (who are hunters and honey gatherers), and the Barbaig tribe (who are solely pastoralists). Other groups of people in the surrounding communities are also benefiting from this project, with emphasis on women, the poor and disadvantaged.

The project’s overall aim is to address the issue of water supply sustainability. The project plan is to train and support the Hadzabe and the Barbaig communities intensively in the first 12 months of the project and then to make close follow up for the next 12 months. This approach allows for the new practices to become familiar to the communities.

Since April 2011, the project implementation has led to improved access to safe and clean water for approximately 3,638 people. This improvement means that women and children, who normally fetch water, save more than 50% of the time they would normally use on this activity.  Its major achievements include improving the access to adequate and clean water within a walking distance of 1,000 meters to the marginalised community in Yaeda Chini ward (Hadzabe and Barbaig communities).

The project has improved access to water for 3,638 people in Masqaroda, Endalachi and Yaeda Chini villages through:

  • 6.8 km gravity scheme with 3 water points
  • 2 new tube wells fitted with hand pumps
  • 1 borehole rehabilitated
  • 1 shallow well rehabilitated
The project has already transformed lives and would not have been possible without the overwhelming contributions from consumers, sponsors and supporters of UK Coffee Week.

UK Coffee Week 2013 aims to raise even more funds to continue this great work in Tanzania.


Click here to see photos from the projects in action so far.
The Hadzabe tribe’s homes, Yaeda Chini ward. (Photo: DMDD/WaterAid)

DMDD rehabilitating a hand pump in Endalachi village in Yaeda Chini ward which will serve more than 300 people.  (Photo: DMDD/WaterAid)
Since the photo was taken the pump has been fully rehabilitated and is now providing water for the village.

 
Water-point-in-Masqaroda-village,-Mbulu-(1).JPG

Young children fetching water from a newly installed water point in Masqaroda village, Mbulu. The water point serves approximately 300 people. (Photo: WaterAid/DMDD)


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