dams architecture water restrictions Bucket borehole water
Photo Credit: On File

According to the Department of Water and Sanitation, more than 21-million South Africans do not have a regular supply of clean water.

 

South Africa (14 July 2020) – Borehole water the solution to providing communities with access to clean water to fight COVID-19!

Clean water is vital in the fight against COVID-19, making access to clean water more urgent than ever. It has been three months since the first case of COVID-19 was diagnosed in the country, and now with winter upon us, the numbers are beginning to skyrocket.

Magali Malherbe, Managing Director of MAMAS Alliance, says: “Clean water is absolutely critical especially now during this pandemic; from washing hands to sanitising surfaces and also keeping hydrated. Lack of access in South Africa’s rural communities compounds the struggle for the most vulnerable. Big business can assist through strategic CSI partnerships.”

Boreholes being installed in communities, as a way of accessing clean water directly underground, can solve a lot of these problems. Borehole water also assists communities in creating and maintaining food gardens, which will sustainably contribute to the health and wellness of many families. The garden’s produce can also provide a source of income further contributing to a sustainable livelihood.

At the end of 2019, the MAMAS Alliance CSI team connected Water for All to one of its NGOs, Children of the Dawn where a borehole was successfully installed in the rural community of Mathabatha in the Limpopo province. Over the last few years, municipal water started to dry up at the pipes and would be available only for a day or two, then nothing. As a result, Children of the Dawn had to buy water which was brought by truck, stored at the organisation’s care centre in steel drums, and changed every few days. This was neither sustainable nor safe. It also prevented the organisation from continuing with their gardening activities.

Children of the Dawn National Programme Manager, Nabila Noor Mohamed says: “Our organisation supports over 100 orphaned and vulnerable children as well as their family members in this community, so it was a huge relief for us when the borehole was finally installed. MTH Drilling was the first to hit the water after a few unsuccessful attempts by other companies. The impact of just this single borehole is the difference between life and death for so many people. We are so grateful to our sponsor. Without funding from the big corporates, it would be exceptionally difficult to make it happen.”

Employees within the Atlas Copco Group, together with Rand-Air and the Epiroc Group, run Water for All on a voluntary basis. The basis for the funding comes from voluntary employee donations, which are matched two times by all three companies. 100% of this money goes to funding projects that give people in need access to clean drinking water, sanitation and hygiene. The actual projects are carried out by partnering NGOs with expertise in water and with local staff in the project country.

“Now, more than ever, large corporates, NGOs and individuals alike, need to come together, link arms and do whatever they can to contribute however they can, towards the betterment of citizens who have been plagued with injustices from times past. I am confident that unity and a commitment towards betterment, both in corporate South Africa and, in our complement of everyday citizens will contribute to the greater good and essentially the survival of our vulnerable communities,” says Bongani Ndlovu, Chairperson of the Water for All fund in the Sub Saharan region.


Sources: Atlas Copco | Water for All 
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Recognised as one of the Mail and Guardian’s Top 200 Young South African’s as well as a Primedia LeadSA Hero, Brent is a change maker, thought leader, radio host, foodie, vlogger, writer and all round good guy.

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