National Bank and Impact Water, with support from the Ministry of Education, have launched a partnership that is set to provide safe drinking water to over 4 million students in 12,000 schools across the country by end of 2019.
The bank will provide distribution, logistic and financial service-support to public primary and secondary schools which are its customers. It will also assist participating schools acquire the necessary infrastructure from Impact Water.
Speaking at the launch, National Bank Managing Director Mr. Wilfred Musau said water is a natural resource that should be well managed , not only in Kenya, but globally. He noted that the bank as a corporate citizen is committed to supporting the government in its endeavour to attain the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGsl.
Making a difference
“Water scarcity affects more than 40 percent of the global population, and that figure is projected to rise. That means 4 in 10 people lack access to safe water. We believe our efforts as National Bank in partnership with relevant organizations like Impact Water will make a difference,”Mr. Muasu said.
The campaign consists of two phases. During phase one which runs until Dec. 31st, 2019, National Bank will support all its existing public school customers. Phase two begins in January 2020 and will include additional public school customers who open accounts with National Bank during or after the first phase.
The bank will unveil micro-loans to qualified schools to make safe drinking water even more affordable. Participating schools will also receive replacement cartridges or tablets through any of the National Bank’s branches across Kenya.
Impact Water delivers safe drinking water through installation and maintenance of high-performance, water purification systems which use technologies such as UV and chlorine treatment. The company uses Aquatab technologies and a social business model to provide affordable, sustainable, easy to maintain and long-lasting water to schools.
“Impact Water’s business model actively addresses the key barriers to the uptake of institutional water purification technologies found in most developing countries including lack of credit and financing, low product awareness, insufficient product and system maintenance and generally weak distribution network. The partnership with National Bank is key for us as it will help us overcome these barriers,” said Mr. Evan Haigler, CEO of Impact Water.
Currently in Kenya, over 4,000 schools in 36 counties are using Impact Water systems every day, supplying over 2,000,000 children with affordable, safe drinking water. The partnership with National Bank is expected to cover additional 7,000 schools as national roll-out begins.