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DFID
working in Partnership with Pump Aid - Water for Life in Zimbabwe
Pumpaid.org
August 12, 2005
Pump Aid tackles
poverty by working with local communities to establish sustainable
supplies of clean water for improved health and increased agricultural
production. The profile of Pump Aid was raised this year, when they
won the St Andrews Medal and Prize for the Environment 2005. In
a strong field of 261 projects nominated from 50 countries, Pump
Aid took the top prize due to the success of their Elephant Pump
programmes in Zimbabwe and Malawi.
DFID has recently
entered into partnership with Pump Aid in Zimbabwe under their Protracted
Relief Programme. This followed a series of small grants awarded
through the British Embassy in Harare which proved to be very cost
effective. Two grants totaling twenty five thousand pounds were
enough for installation of Elephants Pumps at fifty poor rural schools
plus other pumps in the nearby villages benefiting over 30,000 people.
In addition
to providing clean drinking water for children, teachers and local
villagers, these Elephant Pumps have been used to establish school
nutrition gardens. This allows each child to grow a bed of vegetables
during the dry season to take home for their families. The schools
can also use water to generate much needed income through livestock
projects, fruit tree nurseries and irrigated agriculture.
The impact for
girls is especially significant when sustainable supplies of clean
water are established in and around poor rural schools. At present,
girls may arrive at school late due to spending hours collecting
water for their family each morning. Some girls may then be beaten
by teachers due to being late and could even miss further lessons
if these teachers send them to collect water as a punishment (where
there is no supply of water at the school). The personal security
of girls who walk long distances to collect water is also an issue,
since there is a high prevalence of rape. This has contributed to
a large proportion of 16 yr-old girls being HIV+ in some parts of
Zimbabwe.
Village pumps
are usually sited at the most vulnerable homesteads such as child-headed
households. Many thousands of such households now exist in Zimbabwe
as the AIDS pandemic commonly results in the death of both parents.
With children as young as seven years old being left alone to fend
for themselves, it is vital that they get assistance. In addition
to the desperate poverty of this situation, there is also considerable
stigma attached to orphans whose parents are thought to have died
from AIDS. They can become outcasts and may be blamed when eggs,
chickens and vegetables are stolen since they have no parents to
defend them and in some cases because these children are indeed
forced to steel to survive.
An Elephant
Pump at such a homestead provides these children with a ready supply
of clean water for productive irrigation. It also provides clean
drinking water for them and quite a number of the surrounding homesteads.
This means that such children become the gate-keepers of a valuable
community resource which helps to elevate their social status.
A DFID grant
of GBP94,230 was agreed in July 2005 for the first year of what
could be a five-year programme. This initial grant will enable Pump
Aid to build its capacity in Zimbabwe to assist several other NGO's
in the provision of sustainable water supplies for some of the poorest
and most vulnerable people in this troubled country. In the first
year, Pump Aid will mainly be working with CAFOD and CARE, who have
also benefited from new DFID funding under the PRP WATSAN programme.
In partnership with CARE and CAFOD, Pump Aid will install around
500 Elephant Pumps over the next year, and a range of related activities
will also be conducted to improve agricultural production, health,
hygiene and sanitation.
It is hoped
that funding for this DFID PRP WATSAN programme will be increased
in subsequent years allowing Pump Aid to respond to the demand for
training and partnership which has come from other NGO's right across
Zimbabwe. Pump Aid is keen to share skills and experiences so that
other organisations can replicate the success of their community-driven
approach to rural water supply. Pump Aid has also received requests
for partnership, training and seeding from governments and NGO's
in 21 other African countries.
A key component
of Pump Aid's programme is the Elephant Pump. This low-cost technology,
which can be classed in the rope-pump family, was developed by Pump
Aid staff in Zimbabwe from 1996 - 2000. Since the year 2000 over
1,200 pumps have been installed which are now used by around quarter
of a million Zimbabweans. The integrated design is easily maintained
by the pump user at extremely low cost and includes a low cost hand-dug
well system up to 30 metres deep. It is suitable and sustainable
for even the most remote areas and, with an extraction rate of around
one litre per second, it can be used to irrigate nutrition gardens.
The Elephant
Pump needs very little energy to lift a certain volume of water
due to the continuous flow and reduced friction, and it can be adapted
to use a double crank 'bicycle' system. It is therefore safe, easy
and fun to use even for children and the elderly. At schools where
the bicycle system is installed, children have been known to come
to school early to 'play' on the pump while they fill up a tank
of water for the school vegetable garden. This contrasts sharply
to the situation where children had to walk miles for the arduous
chore of fetching water before Elephant Pumps were installed.
The Elephant
Pump is fully enclosed to avoid contamination, which means there
is no danger of children or animals falling in and with the self-filtering
well design (and the self-cleaning no-clog pump) this results in
water of extremely high quality. The pump is built and maintained
using only materials that are locally available in Zimbabwe. Beneficiaries
contribute bricks, sand and unskilled labour during the construction
process which leads to a strong sense of ownership. The pump is
easily maintained by women, men or children, as spare parts can
be made by the beneficiaries themselves if necessary at the village
level, with a little training from the Pump Aid staff. Should water
tables fall, the pump can easily be lifted out by hand and the well
deepened.
The Executive
Director for Pump Aid Ian Thorpe said, "We are proud to be associated
with DFID as we work together to tackle extreme poverty in Africa."
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