By sponsoring a project, you can provide clean water for a community, school, or health clinic. 100% of your donation will fund clean water.
While building a water project is no simple task, we think sponsoring one should be. Here are three steps you can expect:
After you donate, we allocate 100% of your gift to clean water projects. We’ve funded projects in 29 countries around the world.
While work is underway, we’ll share updates from The Current, a news feed of inspiring stories and progress reports from our local partners.
Once construction is complete, we'll share your customized Impact Report, which will include project photos, GPS coordinates, and specific information about the difference you've made.
No two communities are the same, and neither are their water solutions. That’s why our local partners carefully consider factors like geography, water availability, and culture before proposing the right solution.
Networks of pipes supply clean water to community, school, or household tap stands.
Gutters on rooftops direct the flow of rainfall into a sanitary holding bank
Networks of pipes supply clean water to community, school, or household tap stands.
Gutters on rooftops direct the flow of rainfall into a sanitary holding bank
Once completed, we'll show you the water project(s) you sponsored with photos and GPS coordinates. Your virtual recognition will be featured on our Completed Projects Map.
See Proof
charity: water has funded projects in 29 countries worldwide. The featured four highlight the variety of solutions, programs, and costs across our portfolio.
India
Malawi
Nepal
Uganda
India is the seventh-largest country by land area and the second-most populous in the world. Although the national government is committed to improving sanitation and water access, their ambitious goals need outside partnerships to create widespread change. Today, the government is working on the Jal Jeevan Mission, an initiative to bring piped water to every household in India by 2024. Our local partners are supporting these efforts.
We began working with Gram Vikas in 2008. After a 4-year pause due to a capacity-building period at Gram Vikas, we resumed our partnership in 2018. Gram Vikas specializes in piped water systems in the states of Odisha and Jharkhand, where access to improved water and sanitation services remains low. While they are a social-technical partner to the government, they are fully funded by humanitarian organizations.
We’re funding piped systems with household tap stands in India.
How does charity: water determine the cost of sponsoring a project?
How do you choose which communities will receive a water project?
How do you choose your local partners?
Is the community involved in building a charity: water project?
How long do water projects last?
Can I visit the project I sponsored?
If you have additional questions, please reach out. We’d love to tell you more about Water Project Sponsorship opportunities.
Giving as
An individual or family?
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A business or corporate foundation?
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When a community, school, or health clinic receives access to clean water, everything changes. Health improves. Girls don’t miss school. Parents have time to earn extra income.
It is truly one of the best investments you can make. We hope you’ll make it with us.
Interested in making clean water part of your lasting legacy? Learn more about The Tributary
When granting through your donor-advised fund, please use the following information:
Our legal name: Charity Global, Inc.
Tax ID: #22-3936753
Mailing address: 230 Franklin Rd., Ste. 11-II, Franklin, TN 37064
Kindly make checks payable to charity: water and use “Water Project Sponsorship” on any references or memos. Our mailing address is:
charity: water
230 Franklin Rd., Ste. 11-II
Franklin, TN 37064
If you’d like to give a gift via wire or stock, please reach out to connect@charitywater.org for our account information.
We're able to accept donations in the form of stock, government (including municipal) debt, and corporate debt through the Depository Trust Company (DTC). For security, settlement, and reduced paperwork, electronic transfer through the DTC is preferred. This can be arranged from most brokerage accounts.
When you donate crypto directly to charity: water, we immediately convert your coins into fiat. Please visit charitywater.org/crypto to learn more.
Project costs include physical project construction, sanitation and hygiene programs, and sustainability initiatives.
Drilled wells are used when groundwater is available and reachable by either mechanical or manual drilling methods. A borehole is drilled, lined, and tested for water quality to ensure it can supply enough safe water for the community. If necessary, the well is also disinfected. Finally, the well is fitted with a pump that will bring clean water to the surface.
Piped systems are good options if a water source has a high enough yield to sustain multiple water distribution points or is too far away for a community to access. These interconnected pipelines use gravity, electricity, solar power, or a combination of these methods to bring clean water directly to distribution points. The system’s size and structure is tailored to the geography, amount of water available, and financial and technical resources. In some cases, partners can use existing infrastructure. They may rehabilitate non-functional parts or add extensions to existing systems to bring water to more people.
BioSand Filters kill 99% of bacteria in dirty water. It is a simple, low-cost solution that cleans water quickly by filtering dirty water through a biological film, coarse sand, fine sand, and gravel. A spout is installed to access the filtered water.
Sometimes, existing water points need repairs that exceed the financial or technical capacity of the local government and community. Rehabilitating a well or piped system can cost almost as much as building a new one because rehabilitation may require heavy machinery, replacement of hardware and concrete, or the reformation of Water User Committees. Still, it’s an efficient solution because it avoids drilling a new well.
For communities already using nearby and naturally occurring springs as their water source, a spring protection system is sometimes preferred. As the name suggests, this system protects naturally clean spring water from outside contaminants — like livestock and bathing — and provides safe access points for the community to collect it.
Rainwater harvesting is a preferred solution for areas that receive significant annual rainfall. These projects are often large enough to harvest and safely store the water for use throughout the dry season. They’re also an ideal alternative for regions where safe groundwater and public water services are unavailable, unreliable, or too expensive to access.