Cool Water on a Hot Day: A Look Back at LWP Work in Niger

You’ll enjoy the photo above and below from 2015, when we partnered with Final Command Ministries to fund several wells in Niger, not far from the Sahara Desert. One of the wells was drilled in the village of Mayanga Gourma. For the well dedication ceremony, the women wore stunning traditional African clothes, and guests were welcomed with great hospitality. The temperature that day was over 110 degrees, and the new source of clean water was immediately put to good use!

Well Dedication Day

Villagers in Mayanga Gourma in Niger celebrate well dedication day!

LWP Supports Exile International's Peace Lives Center With Water Project

While in the Democratic Republic of Congo in April 2022,, Living Water Project (LWP) board member Jon Lee visited Exile International’s Peace Lives Center in the city of Goma, where rescued child soldiers are being empowered to become leaders for peace.

LWP funded a rainfall catchment system at the Peace Lives Center in 2013, which consists of two 10,000 liter tanks and one smaller one for cooking, cleaning and handwashing. Thanks to donors like you, former child soldiers have access to clean water while being served, rehabilitated and taught the peaceful message of Christ.

LWP Sponsors Rainfall Catchment Systems in Democratic Republic of Congo

In April 2022, Living Water Project (LWP) board member Jon Lee traveled from the city of Goma in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where he was on the ground connecting with our partners who oversee the LWP-sponsored water work there, both at Pinson School and Exile International.

The DRC is currently our only partnering country where drilling for wells is not possible due to volcanic rock beneath the surface. Instead of a well, we funded two rainfall catchment systems at Pinson School, the first one in 2015 and the second in 2021. That system consists of two 10,000 liter tanks that capture and store some of the abundant rainwater through a gutter system around the buildings. The catchment systems are the main water source for the 900+ students at Pinson School, plus several hundred more residents in the surrounding village. Due to the availability of clean drinking water, the Christian school has become well-known in the area and is a light in its community.

The yellow jugs pictured are 5-gallon cans for the students and their families to collect their water. After school ends at 1 p.m., the water becomes available to anyone in the community.

Pinson School is 1/4 mile down the road from our friends at Exile International. There is a special relationship between Pinson and Exile, as several Exile kids also attend the school.

World Water Day 2022: Help Living Water Project Go With the Flow

The photo above is from LWP Board Member Kevin Colvett's recent trip to Guatemala, where the Living Water Project and Lipscomb University’s Peugeot Center engineering students are partnering with nonprofit ADICAY on a water project serving more than 1,000 people. The project officially broke ground in January 2022.

"People are moving several hundred thousand pounds of cement, rock, sand and iron on their backs to build this project, and they will be digging by pick and shovel over six miles of trench to bury the pipe 2.5 feet in the ground," Kevin says. "It's an incredible amount of work. But we have had such an incredible reception and encouragement from the three communities this project will serve."

You can be a part of funding this water project and future work in Guatemala and around the world. Please consider donating to LWP in honor of World Water Day! https://www.livingwaterwells.org/donate

World Water Day 2022: What You Can Do to Prevent Groundwater Contamination

Below ground is 99% of the world's readily potable drinking water. Human activity above ground can have severely negative effects on that water source.

Groundwater pollution happens when pollutants are released into the ground, and over time they move through the soil and end up in natural underground reservoirs called aquifers. Some pollutants can develop naturally, such as decaying matter, minerals and metals, but contamination by man-made toxins, such as gasoline, pesticides and household chemicals, are largely preventable. These toxins can lead to extremely negative health effects in both the people and animals who depend on the water tainted by them.

Fortunately, the communities where the Living Water Project partners to dig wells typically do not have the same kinds of contamination as the industrialized world. The wells installed with help from LWP are deep enough to evade seepage from pit latrines. Plus, chemical testing is required before LWP arrives in a new area for drilling. Additionally, all wells are built with a wellhead protection area to keep out contaminants at the well opening. This water is safe to drink.

And while most of us reading this drink water purified by treatment plants, it is still important to prevent groundwater pollution wherever we can. One way you can prevent groundwater contamination is by disposing of hazardous materials (unused paint, household cleaners, motor oils, etc) at a hazardous waste disposal site. Simply do a Google search of “hazardous materials disposal site near me” and dispose of unwanted items there rather than putting them in the curbside trash or pouring out into your yard. It’s a little extra work, but isn’t cleaner soil, cleaner water and a cleaner planet worth it?

World Water Day 2022: Reflections on a Blessed Childhood

The following post was written by Lynn Mott, Living Water Project Board Member, about her childhood on a farm, where her family’s water didn’t magically come from a tap drawn from a city’s waterworks.

I grew up on a farm that was miles from the nearest water line, so water was always a problem. We were always scared of running out, but I didn’t realize how blessed we were. 

My family was far from rich, but we had resources to deal with the problem. My father was able to drill wells, run a water line from a spring to the house, and install a cistern to collect and store rainwater. Even when those water sources all dried up during long summer droughts, we were able to buy water and have it delivered to the house.

Millions of people in this world aren’t so blessed. They live in remote villages where water is harder to find. Women and girls often must walk several miles to find a spring or other open source of water. Their water supply is limited to whatever they can carry. As they trudge home under the weight of a couple of buckets of water, they have no idea that plenty of fresh, clean groundwater usually is right beneath their feet. 

Groundwater underlies the earth’s surface almost everywhere—beneath oceans, hills, valleys, mountains, lakes and even deserts. It’s not always easy to access, but the water is there, essentially everywhere, if you can dig deep enough.

That’s where The Living Water Project enters the picture. LWP teams identify likely spots to access groundwater near a village and provide well drillers, pipe and pumps to make that water more readily available to villagers.

World Water Day 2022: Overuse's Impact on Groundwater

In most places where the Living Water Project has worked, wells drilled to groundwater are the primary means of a clean water source. But overuse is a serious issue, making it even more difficult to reach the groundwater supply. As the groundwater in an area is depleted, the water table lowers and can drop too low to be serviced by an existing well. In other scenarios, lowering of the water table can require an excessive amount of energy and resources to pump the groundwater to the surface. This can make such projects cost-prohibitive. 

Groundwater and surface water are connected—when groundwater is subjected to overuse, the connected lakes, streams and rivers can also be diminished. Soil compaction or collapse and saltwater intrusion in coastal areas can also impact groundwater. Saltwater intrusion occurs as groundwater is depleted to the point that saltwater moves inland and contaminates fresh water supplies.

Read other blog posts about groundwater in our World Water Day 2022 series.

World Water Day 2022: Tapping Into the Treasure of Groundwater

In many countries, access to clean drinking water depends on tapping into a hidden treasure: groundwater. Groundwater is the 2022 theme of World Water Day, celebrated every March 22 since the United Nations started the observance in 1993.

Groundwater—stored underground in a body of porous rock or sand called an aquifer—accounts for most of the world's freshwater. A water project to reach an aquifer can cost anywhere from $1,000 to a whopping $30,000. The cost depends on several factors, including how remote the location, the cost relative to the local economy and the amount of rock to drill through. The depth ranges to hit clean water can range from 50 to 500 feet.

No matter the depth or location, the Living Water Project is dedicated to finding and tapping into these sources of clean water for the millions of people in need. Thank you for your support of our work!

More Than Money: The Living Water Project Covets Your Prayers & Gifts of Time and Talent

The Living Water Project’s hundreds of volunteers and donors have collectively accomplished an enormous amount over the past 20 years: More than 400,000 people in 800-plus communities in 26 countries who previously didn’t have clean water now have access to it.

Because the Living Water Project is 100% run by volunteers and doesn’t have any paid staff, office space rental or overhead, every dollar donated goes toward clean water projects. But our all-volunteer model means we need more than money—we need YOU.

Here are five non-monetary ways you can contribute to the cause of clean water:

  1. Pray for the success of our well-drilling operations. These operations are taking place or will soon take place in Guatemala, Chad, Cameroon, the Congo, Ghana, Liberia, Mali, Malawi, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Senegal. Pray for the drillers in these countries who are doing the hard, on-the-ground (and in-the-ground!) work.

  2. Pray for our on-the-ground partners. We have long-time partnerships with Final Command Ministries, Exile International, ADICAY, Chikondi Health, Namwianga Mission, One World Health and others. Pray for our friends in these organizations who work closely with the communities who need wells.

  3. Share your skills, talents and time. Do you enjoy planning, logistics and organization? Volunteer to help plan, run and staff our events. Have a talent for photography, graphic design or web design? We can plug you into our communications work. Have a gift for speaking? Share the story of the Living Water Project in your circle of friends and colleagues. No matter your skills, we can use your generous heart and hands.

  4. Use your influence to share Living Water Project information. Follow our accounts on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, and give our posts a boost with your likes and shares. If you know a social media influencer, ask if that person would be interested in learning more about LWP and promoting our social posts to their numerous followers.

  5. Choose the Living Water Project to be your Amazon Smile recipient. By choosing our organization to receive your Amazon Smile funds, a portion of your Amazon purchases will go directly to the Living Water Project.

Shattering Records for Clean Water in 2021: The Living Water Project’s Year in Review

In 2021, the Living Water Project celebrated its 20th year of partnering with communities around the world to provide clean water. As of the end of 2021, this ministry has funded 768 wells or clean water projects in 26 countries

These projects represent a total of $2,139,220 committed to clean water development since our founding.

Here are answers to frequently asked questions:

How many projects were constructed in 2021?
In 2021, LWP funded a total of 93 new wells/clean-water projects (61 new wells and 32 rehabilitated wells), with a total of $337,682 committed to these projects. The total dollars committed to clean water are an all-time single-year record.

Where did these wells and clean water projects take place?
Here is the breakdown of projects by country:

How many people are benefitting from these 93 wells? 
Though we often don’t get exact numbers on how many people are using wells, most wells can serve about 500 people on a regular basis. Based on these numbers from our partners and based on the varying size of the villages we serve, we estimate that 40,000 or more people are drinking clean water at the end of 2021 than at the beginning of the year.

Did you go anywhere new in 2021?
Yes, God led us to begin working in Mali in early 2021 with our outstanding in-country partner Final Command Ministries. A total of nine new wells with solar pumps and water towers have already been constructed there, each serving about 1,000 people.

How much was raised?
Generous donors contributed $503,873 in 2021. This is an all-time single-year LWP record, and is 54% higher than the previous year’s record of $326,802.

What’s on the horizon?
Our board met in early January to start 2022 with $124,900 in funding for an additional 34 wells in Chad, Cameroon, Nigeria, Guatemala and Liberia. Some of these wells have already been drilled! We also have long lists of villages ready for wells in Ghana, Mali, Zambia and other countries. We are particularly excited about broadening our well maintenance and well rehabilitation programs in multiple countries.

Thank you to our friends and donors for your contributions to this work in 2021. We look forward to a great 2022 and all that God has planned. What an incredible legacy our founder Shanon Dickerson left for us, and how faithful the Lord has been through the years!

Jon Lee, president, Living Water Project