Delivering Water to Millions

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Lack of reliable access to water causes serious issues in developing areas.

  • Many people walk miles every day for water
  • Time spent collecting water perpetuates the cycle of poverty
  • A traditional water container weighs more than 40 pounds
  • Headloading for water collection causes chronic pain

Meet the Wello WaterWheel, a 25-gallon drum that moves five times the amount of water possible than traditional methods, which is five gallons on the head. So not only is it alleviating women and girls from this tremendous physical burden of water collection, but it’s also reducing the time burden. Using the WaterWheel it frees up their time for more productive activities like work or school.

Cynthia Koenig, the social entrepreneur behind the WaterWheel says “Wello’s mission is to deliver clean water to a thirsty world. So, initially we’re going to market with our water wheel, which is a water transportation tool, and then in the coming months and years we’ll be adding in filtration, drip irrigation kits, even a cell phone charger that uses the rotation of the wheel to charge the battery of the cell phone, so we really see it as a platform that enables people to get access to not just clean water but other really important essentials like communication and education, and even the ability to run sustainable businesses like water delivery services, so in the long-run my vision for Wello is that it helps lift families out of the cycle of poverty.”

Roll with us from wello on Vimeo.

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Co-founder and the producer of the Sustainability Now podcast, responsible for audio and video production, web development and social media. Scott was Clean Water Action's Philadelphia program director where he stopped a trash incinerator from being built across the street from an elementary school, worked on an ocean dumping ban, the curbside recycling program, workers' right to know about toxic chemicals, integrative pest management, and social justice issues. After a few years building log homes, he has spent the last 20 years as an interactive director and multimedia producer.